In Python, prefixing with one underscore indicates that a member should not be accessed outside of its class. This seems to be on a per-class basis like Java and C++.
However, pylint seems to enforce this convention on a per-object basis. Is there a way to allow per-class access without resorting to #pylint: disable=protected-access
?
class A:
def __init__(self):
self._b = 5
def __eq__(self, other):
return self._b == other._b
Result:
pylint a.py
a.py:6: W0212(protected-access) Access to a protected member _b of a client class
Pylint describes the message here.
pylint doesn't know of which type other
is (how should it, you can compare an instance of A to everything), therefore the warning. I don't think there is a way around disabling the warning.
You can disable the warning for only that one line with appending # pylint: disable=W0212
to that line.