Comparison ========== By default, two instances of ``attrs`` classes are equal if all their fields are equal. For that, ``attrs`` writes ``__eq__`` and ``__ne__`` methods for you. Additionally, if you pass ``order=True`` (which is the default if you use the `attr.s` decorator), ``attrs`` will also create a full set of ordering methods that are based on the defined fields: ``__le__``, ``__lt__``, ``__ge__``, and ``__gt__``. .. _custom-comparison: Customization ------------- As with other features, you can exclude fields from being involved in comparison operations: .. doctest:: >>> from attr import define, field >>> @define ... class C: ... x: int ... y: int = field(eq=False) >>> C(1, 2) == C(1, 3) True Additionally you can also pass a *callable* instead of a bool to both *eq* and *order*. It is then used as a key function like you may know from `sorted`: .. doctest:: >>> from attr import define, field >>> @define ... class S: ... x: str = field(eq=str.lower) >>> S("foo") == S("FOO") True >>> @define(order=True) ... class C: ... x: str = field(order=int) >>> C("10") > C("2") True This is especially useful when you have fields with objects that have atypical comparison properties. Common examples of such objects are `NumPy arrays `_. To save you unnecessary boilerplate, ``attrs`` comes with the `attr.cmp_using` helper to create such functions. For NumPy arrays it would look like this:: import numpy @define(order=False) class C: an_array = field(eq=attr.cmp_using(eq=numpy.array_equal)) .. warning:: Please note that *eq* and *order* are set *independently*, because *order* is `False` by default in `attrs.define` (but not in `attr.s`). You can set both at once by using the *cmp* argument that we've undeprecated just for this use-case.