On 05/02/2013 07:57 AM, Barry Warsaw wrote:
On May 01, 2013, at 11:54 AM, Larry Hastings wrote:
On 04/30/2013 11:29 PM, Ethan Furman wrote:
On 04/30/2013 11:18 PM, Barry Warsaw wrote:
On Apr 28, 2013, at 11:50 PM, Ethan Furman wrote:
But as soon as:
type(Color.red) is Color # True type(MoreColor.red) is MoreColor # True
then:
Color.red is MoreColor.red # must be False, no?
If that last statement can still be True, I'd love it if someone >>> showed me how.
class Foo: a = object() b = object()
class Bar(Foo): c = object()
> Foo.a is Bar.a True
Wow. I think I'm blushing from embarrassment.
Thank you for answering my question, Barry.
Wait, what? I don't see how Barry's code answers your question. In his example, type(a) == type(b) == type(c) == object. You were asking "how can Color.red and MoreColor.red be the same object if they are of different types?"
p.s. They can't.
Sure, why not? In "normal" Python, Bar inherits a from Foo, it doesn't define it so it's exactly the same object. Thus if you access that object through the superclass, you get the same object as when you access it through the subclass.
So Foo.a plays the role of Color.red and Bar.a plays the role of MoreColor.red. Same object, thus `Foo.a is Bar.a` is equivalent to `Color.red is MoreColor.red`.
Same object, true, but my question was if `type(Bar.a) is Bar`, and in your reply `type(Bar.a) is object`. -- ~Ethan~