[Python] Why I need the parameter when the call doesn't use it?
Chris Gonnerman
chris at gonnerman.org
Sun Aug 28 21:42:32 EDT 2011
On 08/28/2011 07:26 PM, Niklas Rosencrantz wrote:
> I modularize code for a webapp and I want to know what python makes that a need to define an argument called self? Here's some code where I'm modularizing a recaptcha test to a function and the I must add the parameter "self" to the function is_submitter_human:
>
> ----
> class A(BaseHandler, blobstore_handlers.BlobstoreUploadHandler):
> def is_submitter_human(self):
is_submitter_human() isn't a function, it's a method. Methods are
always called with a reference to the class instance (i.e. the object)
that the method belongs to; this reference is the first argument, and is
conventionally called "self".
Though I've hacked it out, your code sample includes calls to other
methods of the object, by calling self.methodname(). Without the first
parameter, how else would you do it?
-- Chris.
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