python's OOP question
neoedmund
neoedmund at gmail.com
Sun Oct 15 22:29:18 EDT 2006
I'm trying to achieve a higher level of "reusability". Maybe it cannot
be done in python? Can anybody help me?
Ben Finney wrote:
> "neoedmund" <neoedmund at gmail.com> writes:
>
> > There's a program, it's result is "unexpected aaa", i want it to be
> > "expected aaa". how to make it work?
> >
> > [code]
> >
> > class C1(object):
> > def v(self, o):
> > return "expected "+o
> >
> > class C2(object):
> > def v(self, o):
> > return "unexpected "+o
> > def m(self):
> > print self.v("aaa")
> >
> > class C3(object):
> > def nothing(self):
> > pass
> >
> > def test1():
> > o = C3()
> > setattr(o,"m",C2().m)
> > setattr(o,"v",C1().v)
> > o.m()
>
> Setting attributes on an object externally isn't the same thing as
> making bound methods of that object.
>
> In this case, 'o.m' is a bound method of a C2 instance, and has no
> knowledge of C1. 'o.v' is a bound method of a C1 instance, and has no
> knowledge of C2. Neither of them has any knowledge of C3.
>
> What is it you're trying to achieve?
>
> --
> \ "Unix is an operating system, OS/2 is half an operating system, |
> `\ Windows is a shell, and DOS is a boot partition virus." -- |
> _o__) Peter H. Coffin |
> Ben Finney
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