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python - What happens when you initialize instance variables outside of __init__

In python when you initialize an instance variable (e.g. self.my_var) you should do it in your class __init__ function, so that the memory is properly reserved for this variable per instance (<--my mistake, see bellow). When you want to define class level variables you do it outside of a function and without the self prefix.

What happens when you instantiate a variable inside a function other than the __init__ with the self prefix? It behaves like a normal instance variable, is there a compelling reason to not do it? other than the danger of making code logic implicit, which is enough of a reason already, but I am wondering are you potentially running on memory or other hidden issues if you do so?

I couldn't not find that discussed somewhere.

update sorry

I misinterpreted some answers including the first and the third here Python __init__ and self what do they do? (looking for the others) and thought that __init__ is some special type of function, thinking that it somehow has memory allocation functionality (!?). Wrong question.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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The __init__ method is not special. The only thing that makes __init__ interesting is the fact that it gets called when you call MyClass().

The following are equivalent:

# Set inside __init__
class MyClassA:
    def __init__(self):
        self.x = 0
obj = MyClassA()

# Set inside other method
class MyClassB:
    def my_initialize(self):
        self.x = 0
obj = MyClassB()
obj.my_initialize()

# Set from outside any method, no self
class MyClassC:
    pass
obj = MyClassC()
obj.x = 0

What makes an instance variable is when you assign it, and that can happen anywhere. Also note that self is not special either, it's just an ordinary function parameter (and in fact, you can name it something other than self).

so that the memory is properly reserved for this variable per instance.

You do not need to "reserve memory" in Python. With ordinary object instances, when you assign self.x = 0 or obj.x = 0, it is kind of like putting a value in a dictionary. In fact,

# This is sometimes equivalent, depending on how obj is defined
obj.__dict__['x'] = 0

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