Inheriting from Python list object(type?)
Mangabasi
mangabasi at gmail.com
Wed May 23 14:54:42 EDT 2007
On May 23, 1:43 pm, "Jerry Hill" <malaclyp... at gmail.com> wrote:
> On 23 May 2007 11:31:56 -0700, Mangabasi <mangab... at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > When I modified this to:
>
> > class Point(list):
> > def __init__(self,x,y):
> > super(Point, self).__init__([x, y])
> > self.x = x
> > self.y = y
>
> > It worked.
>
> Are you sure?
>
> >>> p = Point(10, 20)
> >>> p
> [10, 20]
> >>> p.x
> 10
> >>> p.x = 15
> >>> p
> [10, 20]
> >>> p[0]
> 10
> >>> p.x
> 15
>
> That doesn't look like what you were asking for in the original post.
> I'm afraid I don't know anything about numpy arrays or what special
> attributes an object may need to be put into a numpy array though.
>
> --
> Jerry
You are right. I did not include the whole story in my last post.
This is the real code I used and so far it worked. I am still testing
it though. Toes and fingers crossed!
class Point(list):
def __init__(self, x, y, z = 1):
super(Point, self).__init__([x, y, z])
self.x = x
self.y = y
self.z = z
def __getattr__(self, name):
if name == 'x': return self[0]
if name == 'y': return self[1]
if name == 'z': return self[2]
def __setattr__(self, name, value):
if name == 'x': self[0] = value
if name == 'y': self[1] = value
if name == 'z': self[2] = value
Thanks for the correction.
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