in python, is there some way to make the objects of an own class "unhashable"?
import numpy as np
class A: # to be made unhashable
def __init__(self, s=3):
self.some_member = s
sa = set([A(1)]) # fine, but I'd like the same behaviour as below
sn = set([np.ones((1,))]) # TypeError: unhashable type
here A wil always have some defaut __hash__() implementation, but what would I have to do to behave the same as e.g. np.ndarray?
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні I played with it some more and tried np.ones((1,)).__hash__ = lambda: 123 but now it tells me that __hash__ is a read-only property. But the implementation of ndarray just defines __hash__ = None, and I thougth the only way to achieve this is via @property
yeah, I've got a ~/virtualenvs/py3.9_main/lib/python3.9/site-packages/numpy/core/_multiarray_umath.cpython-39-x86_64-linux-gnu.so shared library as expected
So I think what's happening is that ndarray implements __eq__ which disables hash automatically. Since it's a c-extension ("immutable type"?) you can't override it manually either.