Sometimes in __init__ I already have the instance that self is supposed to become, and I simply want to set it to that.
The simplest case is that the argument used to initialize a Foo is itself a Foo.
(Foo(Foo(x)) == Foo(x) just like set({1, 2}) == {1, 2}.)
In the example this is case_trivial. But there is also case_variadic.
Currently I have to set each attribute on its own. Is there a way to do that in one line?
from variadic_foo_operations import foo_addition, foo_multiplication
class Foo(object):
    def __init__(self, arg=None, addends=None, factors=None):
        case_arg = arg is not None
        case_normal = case_arg and type(arg) == int
        case_trivial = case_arg and type(arg) == Foo
        case_add = addends is not None
        case_multiply = factors is not None
        case_variadic = case_add or case_multiply
        if case_normal:
            self.bar = arg
            self.double_bar = 2 * arg
        elif case_trivial:
            the_foo_i_want = arg
        elif case_variadic:
            operation = foo_addition if case_add else foo_multiplication
            operands = addends if case_add else factors
            current_foo = Foo(0) if case_add else Foo(1)  # neutral element
            for operand_foo in operands:
                current_foo = operation(current_foo, operand_foo)
            the_foo_i_want = current_foo
        if case_trivial or case_variadic:
            # What I would like:
            self = the_foo_i_want
            # What I have to do instead:
            self.bar = the_foo_i_want.bar
            self.double_bar = the_foo_i_want.double_bar