I trip over this in our code at work all the time.
Python has this concept of “properties”:
class Oink:
def __init__(self):
self._foo = 3
@property
def my_property(self):
return self._foo
a = Oink()
print(a.my_property)
my_property() is a method but it can be used as if it were a field.
This can also be used to define a setter:
class Oink:
def __init__(self):
self._foo = 3
@property
def my_property(self):
return self._foo
@my_property.setter
def my_property(self, value):
self._foo = 123 * value
Because, for some reason, Python people don’t like getters and setters. Instead, they hide it behind a property.
The result is, when you read this:
a.my_property = 5
print(a.my_property)
You have no idea that this actually calls a method.