For classmethods, the first parameter is the class through which the class method is invoked with instead of the usual self for instancemethods (which all methods in a class implicitly are unless specified otherwise).
Here's an example -- and for the sake of exercise, I added an exception that checks the identity of the cls parameter.
class Base(object):
@classmethod
def acquire(cls, param):
if cls is Base:
raise Exception("Must be called via subclass :(")
return "this is the result of `acquire`ing a %r with %r" % (cls, param)
class Something(Base):
pass
class AnotherThing(Base):
pass
print Something.acquire("example")
print AnotherThing.acquire("another example")
print Base.acquire("this will crash")
this is the result of `acquire`ing a <class '__main__.Something'> with 'example'
this is the result of `acquire`ing a <class '__main__.AnotherThing'> with 'another example'
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "classmethod.py", line 16, in <module>
print Base.acquire("this will crash")
File "classmethod.py", line 5, in acquire
raise Exception("Must be called via subclass :(")
Exception: Must be called via subclass :(
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