Super() function
Alan Harris-Reid
aharrisreid at googlemail.com
Sat Mar 27 11:08:09 EDT 2010
³p wrote:
> Hi:
>
> On 25 March 2010 11:17, Alan Harris-Reid <aharrisreid at googlemail.com
> <mailto:aharrisreid at googlemail.com>> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> Using Python 3.1, I sometimes use the super() function to call the
> equivalent method from a parent class, for example
>
> def mymethod(self):
> super().mymethod()
> some more code...
>
> Is there any way of writing the code so that the super() call is
> generic and automatically recognises the name of the current
> method (ie. something like super().thismethod()) or do I always
> have to repeat the method name after super()?
>
> TIA,
> Alan
> --
> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
>
>
>
>
> I think, the super() method is designed to delegate any method call
> to one of the class in its mro list, and the super() function its self
> return a 'super' object, so it is better to write what method you want
> to delegate, maybe it's not the current method.
>
> --
> Best wishes from Ray ...
Thanks Ray - I'll stick to repeating the method name.
Regards,
Alan
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