Exclude __builtin__ Module
The __builtin__ module in Python clutters a developers namespace with lots of functions and classes that have very generic names (e.g. max, sum, id, hash etc.) that often get in th
Solution 1:
You can simply delete __builtins__
, the name Python uses to find the built-in namespace:
>>> del __builtins__
>>> max
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
NameError: name 'max' is not defined
Warning: If you do this in someone else's namespace, they will hate you.
...and require explicit imports instead?
Note that import statements are resolved using builtins ;)
>>> del __builtins__
>>> from builtins import max
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ImportError: __import__ not found
... very generic names (e.g. max, sum, id, hash etc.) that often get in the way of naming variables and when outside of a context-aware IDE one can accidentally overwrite a name without noticing
You will only create a local variable which shadows the name. This is actually fairly inconsequential if you do it from within a limited scope, although it's still bad form (readability counts).
# this shadows built-in hash function in this namespace ... meh?
hash = '38762cf7f55934b34d179ae6a4c80cadccbb7f0a'
# this stomps built-in hash ... not a honking great idea!
import builtins
builtins.hash = lambda obj: -1
Best practice:
- Use a context-aware editor which will give you a squiggly underline for name collisions, or
- Use Python long enough that you know the built-in names by heart (seriously!)
- Avoid name shadowing by using a synonym (e.g.
checksum
) or appending a trailing underscore on the name (e.g.hash_
)
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