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18.7: Inheritance

  • Page ID
    42476
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    Inheritance is the ability to define a new class that is a modified version of an existing class. As an example, let’s say we want a class to represent a “hand”, that is, the cards held by one player. A hand is similar to a deck: both are made up of a collection of cards, and both require operations like adding and removing cards.

    A hand is also different from a deck; there are operations we want for hands that don’t make sense for a deck. For example, in poker we might compare two hands to see which one wins. In bridge, we might compute a score for a hand in order to make a bid.

    This relationship between classes—similar, but different—lends itself to inheritance. To define a new class that inherits from an existing class, you put the name of the existing class in parentheses:

    class Hand(Deck):
        """Represents a hand of playing cards."""
    

    This definition indicates that Hand inherits from Deck; that means we can use methods like pop_card and add_card for Hands as well as Decks.

    When a new class inherits from an existing one, the existing one is called the parent and the new class is called the child.

    In this example, Hand inherits __init__ from Deck, but it doesn’t really do what we want: instead of populating the hand with 52 new cards, the init method for Hands should initialize cards with an empty list.

    If we provide an init method in the Hand class, it overrides the one in the Deck class:

    # inside class Hand:
    
        def __init__(self, label=''):
            self.cards = []
            self.label = label
    

    When you create a Hand, Python invokes this init method, not the one in Deck.

    >>> hand = Hand('new hand')
    >>> hand.cards
    []
    >>> hand.label
    'new hand'
    

    The other methods are inherited from Deck, so we can use pop_card and add_card to deal a card:

    >>> deck = Deck()
    >>> card = deck.pop_card()
    >>> hand.add_card(card)
    >>> print(hand)
    King of Spades
    

    A natural next step is to encapsulate this code in a method called move_cards:

    #inside class Deck:
    
        def move_cards(self, hand, num):
            for i in range(num):
                hand.add_card(self.pop_card())
    

    move_cards takes two arguments, a Hand object and the number of cards to deal. It modifies both self and hand, and returns None.

    In some games, cards are moved from one hand to another, or from a hand back to the deck. You can use move_cards for any of these operations: self can be either a Deck or a Hand, and hand, despite the name, can also be a Deck.

    Inheritance is a useful feature. Some programs that would be repetitive without inheritance can be written more elegantly with it. Inheritance can facilitate code reuse, since you can customize the behavior of parent classes without having to modify them. In some cases, the inheritance structure reflects the natural structure of the problem, which makes the design easier to understand.

    On the other hand, inheritance can make programs difficult to read. When a method is invoked, it is sometimes not clear where to find its definition. The relevant code may be spread across several modules. Also, many of the things that can be done using inheritance can be done as well or better without it.


    This page titled 18.7: Inheritance is shared under a CC BY-NC 3.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Allen B. Downey (Green Tea Press) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.

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