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Start your free trialThomas Bynum
4,616 PointsWhat is the point of a magic method?
I feel dense watching these videos, but what is the point of a magic method? I thought python knew how to add and subtract and convert to integers without me telling it how to do that. What is __add__
doing differently than a + b?
1 Answer
Chris Freeman
Treehouse Moderator 68,441 PointsGood question! All of the built-in types have magic methods like __add__
, __radd__
, and __iadd__
predefined so it appears that things like a+b
just work. The types int
, str
, float
, etc. all have these magic methods.
When creating user-defined classes, how to βaddβ two instances of a class is at best unknown. By defining the requisite magic methods, the new class can take advantage of the + operator to do interesting things.
Post back if you need more help. Good luck!!!
Thomas Bynum
4,616 PointsThomas Bynum
4,616 PointsThank you! So if you wanted to for some reason make + take the input and make it all capital letters and reverse it, you could? This is just giving us control over what the "normal" functions do?
Thanks for all your great feedback by the way. I've used your answers to so many questions to make sense of all this stuff.
Chris Freeman
Treehouse Moderator 68,441 PointsChris Freeman
Treehouse Moderator 68,441 PointsCorrect! The operator + and * call the methods
__add__
and__mul__
, respectively.To be really crazy, you could create a new class that inherited from
int
then override__add__
and__mul__
with each otherβs definition so that + multiplied and * added! πHappy to help!