return False
+How can a subclass control what data is stored in an immutable instance?
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+When subclassing an immutable type, override the :meth:`__new__` method
+instead of the :meth:`__init__` method. The latter only runs *after* an
+instance is created, which is too late to alter data in an immutable
+instance.
+
+All of these immutable classes have a different signature than their
+parent class:
+
+.. testcode::
+
+ from datetime import date
+
+ class FirstOfMonthDate(date):
+ "Always choose the first day of the month"
+ def __new__(cls, year, month, day):
+ return super().__new__(cls, year, month, 1)
+
+ class NamedInt(int):
+ "Allow text names for some numbers"
+ xlat = {'zero': 0, 'one': 1, 'ten': 10}
+ def __new__(cls, value):
+ value = cls.xlat.get(value, value)
+ return super().__new__(cls, value)
+
+ class TitleStr(str):
+ "Convert str to name suitable for a URL path"
+ def __new__(cls, s):
+ s = s.lower().replace(' ', '-')
+ s = ''.join([c for c in s if c.isalnum() or c == '-'])
+ return super().__new__(cls, s)
+
+The classes can be used like this:
+
+.. doctest::
+
+ >>> FirstOfMonthDate(2012, 2, 14)
+ FirstOfMonthDate(2012, 2, 1)
+ >>> NamedInt('ten')
+ 10
+ >>> NamedInt(20)
+ 20
+ >>> TitleStr('Blog: Why Python Rocks')
+ 'blog-why-python-rocks'
+
+
Modules
=======