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python - Automatically setting an enum member's value to its name

I've been messing around with python's enum library and have come across a conundrum. In the docs, they show an example of an auto-numbering enum, wherein something is defined:

class Color(AutoNumber):
    red = ()
    green = ()
    ...

I want to make a similar class, but the value would automatically be set from the name of the member AND keep the functionality that you get from doing the str and enum mixin stuff

So something like:

class Animal(MagicStrEnum):
    horse = ()
    dog = ()

Animal.dog == 'dog' # True

I've looked at the source code of the enum module and tried a lot of variations messing around with __new__ and the EnumMeta class

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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Update: 2017-03-01

In Python 3.6 (and Aenum 2.01) Flag and IntFlag classes have been added; part of that was a new auto() helper that makes this trivially easy:

>>> class AutoName(Enum):
...     def _generate_next_value_(name, start, count, last_values):
...         return name
...
>>> class Ordinal(AutoName):
...     NORTH = auto()
...     SOUTH = auto()
...     EAST = auto()
...     WEST = auto()
...
>>> list(Ordinal)
[<Ordinal.NORTH: 'NORTH'>, <Ordinal.SOUTH: 'SOUTH'>, <Ordinal.EAST: 'EAST'>, <Ordinal.WEST: 'WEST'>]

Original answer

The difficulty with an AutoStr class is that the name of the enum member is not passed into the code that creates it, so it is unavailable for use. Another wrinkle is that str is immutable, so we can't change those types of enums after they have been created (by using a class decorator, for example).

The easiest thing to do is use the Functional API:

Animal = Enum('Animal', [(a, a) for a in ('horse', 'dog')], type=str)

which gives us:

>>> list(Animal)
[<Animal.horse: 'horse'>, <Animal.dog: 'dog'>]

>>> Animal.dog == 'dog'
True

The next easiest thing to do, assuming you want to make a base class for your future enumeration use, would be something like my DocEnem:

class DocEnum(Enum):
    """
    compares equal to all cased versions of its name
    accepts a doctring for each member
    """
    def __new__(cls, *args):
        """Ignores arguments (will be handled in __init__)"""
        obj = object.__new__(cls)
        obj._value_ = None
        return obj

    def __init__(self, doc=None):
        # first, fix _value_
        self._value_ = self._name_.lower()
        self.__doc__ = doc

    def __eq__(self, other):
        if isinstance(other, basestring):
            return self._value_ == other.lower()
        elif not isinstance(other, self.__class__):
            return NotImplemented
        return self is other

    def __hash__(self):
        # keep DocEnum hashable
        return hash(self._value_)

    def __ne__(self, other):
        return not self == other

and in use:

class SpecKind(DocEnum):
    REQUIRED = "required value"
    OPTION = "single value per name"
    MULTI = "multiple values per name (list form)"
    FLAG = "boolean value per name"
    KEYWORD = 'unknown options'

Note that unlike the first option, DocEnum members are not strs.


If you want to do it the hard way: subclass EnumMeta and fiddle with the new Enum's class dictionary before the members are created:

from enum import EnumMeta, Enum, _EnumDict

class StrEnumMeta(EnumMeta):
    def __new__(metacls, cls, bases, oldclassdict):
        """
        Scan through `oldclassdict` and convert any value that is a plain tuple
        into a `str` of the name instead
        """
        newclassdict = _EnumDict()
        for k, v in oldclassdict.items():
            if v == ():
                v = k
            newclassdict[k] = v
        return super().__new__(metacls, cls, bases, newclassdict)

class AutoStrEnum(str, Enum, metaclass=StrEnumMeta):
    "base class for name=value str enums"

class Animal(AutoStrEnum):
    horse = ()
    dog = ()
    whale = ()

print(Animal.horse)
print(Animal.horse == 'horse')
print(Animal.horse.name, Animal.horse.value)

Which gives us:

Animal.horse
True
horse horse

1 Disclosure: I am the author of the Python stdlib Enum, the enum34 backport, and the Advanced Enumeration (aenum) library.


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