Here is my code:
class a(object):
    d='ddd'
    def __contains__(self):
        if self.d:return True
b=a()
print b.contains('d')  # error
print contains(b,'d')  # error
Here is my code:
class a(object):
    d='ddd'
    def __contains__(self):
        if self.d:return True
b=a()
print b.contains('d')  # error
print contains(b,'d')  # error
 
    
     
    
    Like all special methods (with "magic names" that begin and end in __), __contains__ is not meant to be called directly (except in very specific cases, such as up=calls to the superclass): rather, such methods are called as part of the operation of built-ins and operators.  In the case of __contains__, the operator in question is in -- the "containment check" operator.
With your class a as you present it (except for fixing your typo, and using True instead of true!-), and b as its instance, print 'x' in b will print True -- and so will any other containment check on b, since b always returns True (because self.d, a non-empty string, is true).
 
    
     
    
    __contains__ method defines how instances of class behave when they appear at right side of in and not in operator.
class Person(object):
      def __init__(self,name,age):
          self.name = name
          self.age = age
      def __contains__(self,param1):
          return True if param1 in self.__dict__.keys() else False
>>> p = Person('Robby Krieger',23)
>>> 'name' in p
True  
 
    
     
    
    if self.d:return true
self.d is the string 'ddd'. Non-empty strings are always truthy: when you use if on 'ddd' it will always act as if you'd said if True:.
I think what you probably meant is:
def __contains__(self, item):
    return item in self.d
in is the operator that calls the __contains__ method behind the scenes.
 
    
    Lets see a very simple example of magic method __contains__ :
Suppose I have class Player and my __init__ method takes one string argument name. In main I have created an object (obj1) of class Player.
Now if I want to know if my obj1 (in this case attribute name of obj1) contains a particular string, substring or an alphabet, I have to implement __contains__ method as shown in the example.
If my class has __contains__ method I can call built-in operator in on my custom objects as shown in the example.
   class Player():
    def __init__(self, name):
        self.name=name
    def __contains__(self, substring):
        if substring in self.name:
            return True
        else:
            return False
obj1=Player("Sam")
print ('am' in obj1)    ----> True
print ('ami' in obj1)   ----> False
