--- title: "Quick Python: Getters and Setters" date: 2020-04-08T18:15:21-04:00 draft: false tags: ["Python"] medium_enabled: true --- One of the hidden gems in Python classes are seamless getters and setters. I discovered this through the book [Effective Python by Brett Slatkin](https://effectivepython.com/). Though the example I'll use is different and shorter than the one he uses in his book. Let's create a class representing a person. The only information we're going to store is their age and we'll make it optional to provide it. ```python class Person: def __init__(self, age=None): self._age = None @property def age(self): if self._age is None: raise ValueError("age must be set before accessing it.") return self._age @age.setter def age(self, age): if age < 0: raise ValueError("age must be at least zero.") self._age = age ``` The second function in the class decorated by `@property` will be the getter function for the attribute `_age`. The name of the function will be what we expect the user to access it as. The setter is then decorated with `age.setter` where `age` is the name of the attribute. As such the name chosen in the getter function name, setter function name, and decorator must all match. Now let's try using it ```python bobby = Person() bobby.age ``` ``` Traceback (most recent call last): File "", line 1, in File "/home/user/test.py", line 7, in age raise ValueError("age must first be set before accessing it") ValueError: age must first be set before accessing it ``` ```python bobby.age = 5 bobby.age ``` ``` 5 ```