A question about Python Classes
Pascal J. Bourguignon
pjb at informatimago.com
Thu Apr 21 13:12:11 EDT 2011
chad <cdalten at gmail.com> writes:
> Let's say I have the following....
>
> class BaseHandler:
> def foo(self):
> print "Hello"
>
> class HomeHandler(BaseHandler):
> pass
>
>
> Then I do the following...
>
> test = HomeHandler()
> test.foo()
>
> How can HomeHandler call foo() when I never created an instance of
> BaseHandler?
But you created one!
test is an instance of HomeHandler, which is a subclass of BaseHandler,
so test is also an instance of BaseHandler.
A subclass represents a subset of the instances of its super class.
--
__Pascal Bourguignon__ http://www.informatimago.com/
A bad day in () is better than a good day in {}.
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