can't instantiate following inner class
Larry Bates
larry.bates at websafe.com
Wed Dec 27 19:41:18 EST 2006
Pyenos wrote:
> class One:
> Two() #can't instantiate
> class Two:
> Three() #can't instantiate
> class Three:pass
>
>
>
You keep posting examples with the same problems
that others have addressed. It appears you are trying
to write Python in a way that some "other" language
works. You really should see the posted solutions and
go through the tutorial before posting again.
Note the following is "normally" not used Python:
Two()
This would instantiate a Two class that wouldn't be bound
to anything so you could never access it again in the
future. It would then be thrown away by garbage collection.
Proper way is:
class One:
def __init__(self):
self.Two=Two()
Of course Two must be a proper class definition also.
class Two:
def __init__(self):
self.Three=Three()
class Three:
pass
-Larry
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