Need help with Python scoping rules
Piet van Oostrum
piet at cs.uu.nl
Thu Aug 27 16:07:51 EDT 2009
>>>>> kj <no.email at please.post> (k) wrote:
>k> No, the fact() function here represents an internal "helper"
>k> function. It is meant to be called only once to help initialize
>k> a class variable that would be inconvenient to initialize otherwise;
>k> this helper function is not meant to be called from outside the
>k> class statement. Granted, in the example I gave, the "helper"
>k> function (factorial) is a bit silly, but that was just intended as
>k> a simple and familiar example of a recursive function. The actual
>k> function that motivated this post would be considerably more
>k> difficult to explain and would have obscured the point of the post.
Classes don't have helper functions; they have methods. Instance
methods, static methods or class methods. Your's isn't either of these.
Methods are to be called like `something.method(...)'.
--
Piet van Oostrum <piet at cs.uu.nl>
URL: http://pietvanoostrum.com [PGP 8DAE142BE17999C4]
Private email: piet at vanoostrum.org
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