Class and Object Terms

The foundations of Object-Oriented Programming is defining a Class

  • In Object-Oriented Programming (OOP), a class is a blueprint for creating an Object. (a data structure). An Object is used like many other Python variables.
  • A Class has ...
    • a collection of data, these are called Attributes and in Python are pre-fixed using the keyword self
    • a collection of Functions/Procedures. These are called *Methods when they exist inside a Class definition.
  • An Object is created from the Class/Template. Characteristics of objects ...
    • an Object is an Instance of the Class/Template
    • there can be many Objects created from the same Class
    • each Object contains its own Instance Data
    • the data is setup by the Constructor, this is the "init" method in a Python class
    • all methods in the Class/Template become part of the Object, methods are accessed using dot notation (object.method())
  • A Python Class allow for the definition of @ decorators, these allow access to instance data without the use of functions ...
    • @property decorator (aka getter). This enables developers to reference/get instance data in a shorthand fashion (object.name versus object.get_name())
    • @name.setter decorator (aka setter). This enables developers to update/set instance data in a shorthand fashion (object.name = "John" versus object.set_name("John"))
    • observe all instance data (self._name, self.email ...) are prefixed with "", this convention allows setters and getters to work with more natural variable name (name, email ...)

Class and Object Code

# Werkzeug is a collection of libraries that can be used to create a WSGI (Web Server Gateway Interface)
# A gateway in necessary as a web server cannot communicate directly with Python.
# In this case, imports are focused on generating hash code to protect passwords.
from werkzeug.security import generate_password_hash, check_password_hash
import json
from datetime import date

# Define a User Class/Template
# -- A User represents the data we want to manage
class User:    
    # constructor of a User object, initializes the instance variables within object (self)
    def __init__(self, name, uid, password, dob, grad):
        self._name = name    # variables with self prefix become part of the object, 
        self._uid = uid
        self.set_password(password)
        self._dob = dob
        self._grad = grad
        self.set_age(dob)

    def set_age(self, age):
        today = date.today()
        temp = today.year - self._dob[0] - ((today.month, today.day) < (self._dob[1], self._dob[2]))
        self._age = temp

    # a name getter method, extracts name from object
    @property
    def name(self):
        return self._name
    
    # a setter function, allows name to be updated after initial object creation
    @name.setter
    def name(self, name):
        self._name = name

    @property
    def dob(self):
        return self._dob
    @dob.setter
    def dob(self, dob):
        self._dob = dob

    @property
    def grad(self):
        return self._grad
    @grad.setter
    def grad(self, grad):
        self._grad = grad
    
    # a getter method, extracts email from object
    @property
    def uid(self):
        return self._uid
    
    # a setter function, allows name to be updated after initial object creation
    @uid.setter
    def uid(self, uid):
        self._uid = uid
        
    # check if uid parameter matches user id in object, return boolean
    def is_uid(self, uid):
        return self._uid == uid
    
    @property
    def password(self):
        return self._password[0:10] + "..." # because of security only show 1st characters

    # update password, this is conventional setter
    def set_password(self, password):
        """Create a hashed password."""
        self._password = generate_password_hash(password, method='sha256')

    # check password parameter versus stored/encrypted password
    def is_password(self, password):
        """Check against hashed password."""
        result = check_password_hash(self._password, password)
        return result
    
    # output content using str(object) in human readable form, uses getter
    def __str__(self):
        return f'name: "{self.name}", id: "{self.uid}", psw: "{self.password}", grad: {self.grad}, dob: {self.dob}, age: {self._age}'

    # output command to recreate the object, uses attribute directly
    def __repr__(self):
        return f'Person(name={self._name}, uid={self._uid}, password={self._password})'


# tester method to print users
def tester(users, uid, psw):
    result = None
    for user in users:
        # test for match in database
        if user.uid == uid and user.is_password(psw):  # check for match
            print("* ", end="")
            result = user
        # print using __str__ method
        print(str(user))
    return result
        

# place tester code inside of special if!  This allows include without tester running
if __name__ == "__main__":

    # define user objects
    u1 = User(name='Thomas Edison', uid='toby', password='123toby', dob=[2004, 10, 10], grad=2024)
    u2 = User(name='Nicholas Tesla', uid='nick', password='123nick', dob=[2002, 10, 5], grad=2025)
    u3 = User(name='Alexander Graham Bell', uid='lex', password='123lex', dob=[2007, 9, 4], grad=2022)
    u4 = User(name='Eli Whitney', uid='eli', password='123eli', dob=[2001, 1, 8], grad=2027)
    u5 = User(name='Hedy Lemarr', uid='hedy', password='123hedy', dob=[2010, 10, 10], grad=2026)

    # put user objects in list for convenience
    users = [u1, u2, u3, u4, u5]

    # Find user
    print("Test 1, find user 3")
    u = tester(users, u3.uid, "123lex")


    # Change user
    print("Test 2, change user 3")
    u.name = "John Mortensen"
    u.uid = "jm1021"
    u.set_password("123qwerty")
    u = tester(users, u.uid, "123qwerty")


    # Make dictionary
    ''' 
    The __dict__ in Python represents a dictionary or any mapping object that is used to store the attributes of the object. 
    Every object in Python has an attribute that is denoted by __dict__. 
    Use the json.dumps() method to convert the list of Users to a JSON string.
    '''
    print("Test 3, make a dictionary")
    json_string = json.dumps([user.__dict__ for user in users]) 
    print(json_string)

    print("Test 4, make a dictionary")
    json_string = json.dumps([vars(user) for user in users]) 
    print(json_string)

print("\n\n\n\n----------------------------ALL PEOPLE----------------")
print(u1)
print(u2)
print(u3)
print(u4)
print(u5)
Test 1, find user 3
name: "Thomas Edison", id: "toby", psw: "sha256$kaM...", grad: 2024, dob: [2004, 10, 10], age: 18
name: "Nicholas Tesla", id: "nick", psw: "sha256$fEX...", grad: 2025, dob: [2002, 10, 5], age: 20
* name: "Alexander Graham Bell", id: "lex", psw: "sha256$3Wp...", grad: 2022, dob: [2007, 9, 4], age: 15
name: "Eli Whitney", id: "eli", psw: "sha256$nVU...", grad: 2027, dob: [2001, 1, 8], age: 22
name: "Hedy Lemarr", id: "hedy", psw: "sha256$Zt9...", grad: 2026, dob: [2010, 10, 10], age: 12
Test 2, change user 3
name: "Thomas Edison", id: "toby", psw: "sha256$kaM...", grad: 2024, dob: [2004, 10, 10], age: 18
name: "Nicholas Tesla", id: "nick", psw: "sha256$fEX...", grad: 2025, dob: [2002, 10, 5], age: 20
* name: "John Mortensen", id: "jm1021", psw: "sha256$Og6...", grad: 2022, dob: [2007, 9, 4], age: 15
name: "Eli Whitney", id: "eli", psw: "sha256$nVU...", grad: 2027, dob: [2001, 1, 8], age: 22
name: "Hedy Lemarr", id: "hedy", psw: "sha256$Zt9...", grad: 2026, dob: [2010, 10, 10], age: 12
Test 3, make a dictionary
[{"_name": "Thomas Edison", "_uid": "toby", "_password": "sha256$kaMthckY5gyYmKvh$ce004ad5c050b83d290f9a5ba41bf3c308f98aca184ecf547a572d3b8eef4d25", "_dob": [2004, 10, 10], "_grad": 2024, "_age": 18}, {"_name": "Nicholas Tesla", "_uid": "nick", "_password": "sha256$fEXR2ze8rC0dDbXS$bdcef10efdbffa7ab4f10e1e13334d35c2eca86ad3cfbef9e7786d8f9ccc7789", "_dob": [2002, 10, 5], "_grad": 2025, "_age": 20}, {"_name": "John Mortensen", "_uid": "jm1021", "_password": "sha256$Og6AzPtqP6TRVZPZ$1e7982adc9091c9e7b58e9778be650f8c5e612ac56bebb1c3c07b781a4420609", "_dob": [2007, 9, 4], "_grad": 2022, "_age": 15}, {"_name": "Eli Whitney", "_uid": "eli", "_password": "sha256$nVUIsQjl68dKPcQb$76f3e2bace5917660ad8f2a094fa30f5844663634e4cecbe88abcc2a39806b0a", "_dob": [2001, 1, 8], "_grad": 2027, "_age": 22}, {"_name": "Hedy Lemarr", "_uid": "hedy", "_password": "sha256$Zt9Cx7thU2RwkC03$62d66b81a3ec623509bb1c5cec2c1f2e89a632a71a429d6ad809cd9265913c40", "_dob": [2010, 10, 10], "_grad": 2026, "_age": 12}]
Test 4, make a dictionary
[{"_name": "Thomas Edison", "_uid": "toby", "_password": "sha256$kaMthckY5gyYmKvh$ce004ad5c050b83d290f9a5ba41bf3c308f98aca184ecf547a572d3b8eef4d25", "_dob": [2004, 10, 10], "_grad": 2024, "_age": 18}, {"_name": "Nicholas Tesla", "_uid": "nick", "_password": "sha256$fEXR2ze8rC0dDbXS$bdcef10efdbffa7ab4f10e1e13334d35c2eca86ad3cfbef9e7786d8f9ccc7789", "_dob": [2002, 10, 5], "_grad": 2025, "_age": 20}, {"_name": "John Mortensen", "_uid": "jm1021", "_password": "sha256$Og6AzPtqP6TRVZPZ$1e7982adc9091c9e7b58e9778be650f8c5e612ac56bebb1c3c07b781a4420609", "_dob": [2007, 9, 4], "_grad": 2022, "_age": 15}, {"_name": "Eli Whitney", "_uid": "eli", "_password": "sha256$nVUIsQjl68dKPcQb$76f3e2bace5917660ad8f2a094fa30f5844663634e4cecbe88abcc2a39806b0a", "_dob": [2001, 1, 8], "_grad": 2027, "_age": 22}, {"_name": "Hedy Lemarr", "_uid": "hedy", "_password": "sha256$Zt9Cx7thU2RwkC03$62d66b81a3ec623509bb1c5cec2c1f2e89a632a71a429d6ad809cd9265913c40", "_dob": [2010, 10, 10], "_grad": 2026, "_age": 12}]




----------------------------ALL PEOPLE----------------
name: "Thomas Edison", id: "toby", psw: "sha256$kaM...", grad: 2024, dob: [2004, 10, 10], age: 18
name: "Nicholas Tesla", id: "nick", psw: "sha256$fEX...", grad: 2025, dob: [2002, 10, 5], age: 20
name: "John Mortensen", id: "jm1021", psw: "sha256$Og6...", grad: 2022, dob: [2007, 9, 4], age: 15
name: "Eli Whitney", id: "eli", psw: "sha256$nVU...", grad: 2027, dob: [2001, 1, 8], age: 22
name: "Hedy Lemarr", id: "hedy", psw: "sha256$Zt9...", grad: 2026, dob: [2010, 10, 10], age: 12

Hacks

Add new attributes/variables to the Class. Make class specific to your CPT work.

  • Add classOf attribute to define year of graduation
    • Add setter and getter for classOf
  • Add dob attribute to define date of birth
    • This will require investigation into Python datetime objects as shown in example code below
    • Add setter and getter for dob
  • Add instance variable for age, make sure if dob changes age changes
    • Add getter for age, but don't add/allow setter for age
  • Update and format tester function to work with changes

Start a class design for each of your own Full Stack CPT sections of your project

  • Use new code cell in this notebook
  • Define init and self attributes
  • Define setters and getters
  • Make a tester
class food:
  def __init__(self, name, course, cuisine, prep):
    self.name = name
    self.course = course
    self.cuisine = cuisine
    self.prep = prep

  def myfunc(self):
    print(self.name + " is a " + self.course + ", part of the " + self.cuisine + " cuisine. It takes approximately " + str(self.prep) + " minutes to prepare.")

noodles = food("soup noodles", "main", "Chinese", 45)
fries = food("french fries", "appetizer", "American", 30)
baklava = food("baklava", "dessert", "Ottoman", 90)

noodles.myfunc()
fries.myfunc()
baklava.myfunc()
soup noodles is a main, part of the Chinese cuisine. It takes approximately 45 minutes to prepare.
french fries is a appetizer, part of the American cuisine. It takes approximately 30 minutes to prepare.
baklava is a dessert, part of the Ottoman cuisine. It takes approximately 90 minutes to prepare.