Please note, this is a STATIC archive of website www.tutorialspoint.com from 11 May 2019, cach3.com does not collect or store any user information, there is no "phishing" involved.
Tutorialspoint

Accessing Class Attributes in Python

import operator
class Employee:
    empId = 0
    name = "Divya"
    age = 22
    department = "Finance"
    
    def __init__(self, empId, name, age, department):
      self.empId = empId
      self.name = name
      self.age = age
      self.department = department
      
employee1 = Employee(10, "Arjun", 32, "Finance")
employee2 = Employee(5, "Swetha", 29, "HR")
employee3 = Employee(3, "Rithika", 29, "HR")
employee4 = Employee(7, "Sakthi", 30, "Sales")
employee5 = Employee(4, "Rakshitha", 40, "Finance")
employee6 = Employee(1, "Raj", 43, "Production")
employee7 = Employee(2, "Ravi", 45, "Sales")
employee8 = Employee(6, "Radha", 42, "Finance")
employee9 = Employee(8, "Priya", 32, "HR")
employee10 = Employee(9, "Ramya", 32, "HR")

store = {}

def display(list_of_employees):
    for emp in list_of_employees:
        store[emp.empId] = (emp.name, emp.age, emp.department)
        
display([employee1, employee2, employee3, employee4, employee5, employee6, employee7, employee8, employee9, employee10])

empDict =  sorted(store.items(),reverse=True)

values=[]
for key,val in empDict:
    values=list(val)
    print "EmpId= ", str(key), ",Name= ",values[0], ",Age= ",values[1], ",Department= ",values[2]

Advertisements
Loading...

We use cookies to provide and improve our services. By using our site, you consent to our Cookies Policy.