Which part of the loop is it going through in this class frame?
Terry Reedy
tjreedy at udel.edu
Wed Mar 7 18:30:23 EST 2018
On 3/7/2018 4:57 PM, C W wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am new to OOP. I'm a bit confused about the following code.
>
> class Clock(object):
> def __init__(self, time):
> self.time = time
> def print_time(self):
> time = '6:30'
> print(self.time)
Local name 'time' is bound to '6:30'.
Attribute 'time' of the 'self' instance is bound to '5:30' because of
the call and initization. You asked to print the latter. If you write
'print(time)' you will see '6:30'.
> clock = Clock('5:30')
> clock.print_time()
> 5:30
>
> I set time to 6:30, but it's coming out to 5:30. I guess it's because I
> passed in 5:30, so, it's replaced?
>
> How does line-by-line execution run inside a frame? How does __init__ work?
> I understand you must have __init__. Is it run before print_time(), if so,
> why don't I just set self.time = '6:30' instead of self.time = time?
>
> Thanks!
>
--
Terry Jan Reedy
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