Hello, I am experiencing a weird behavior that is driving me crazy. I have module called Sensors containing, among other things:
class Manager: def getStatus(self): print "getStatus(self=%s)" % self return {"a": "b", "c": "d"} and then I have another module called SensorSingleton that emulates the hard-to-code-on-python singleton in this way: manager = Manager() print "manager=%s" % manager def getStatus(): print "getStatus()" return manager.getStatus() and then in some other module, I import SensorSingleton and I do, among other things: print SensorSingleton.getStatus() and the output is more or less like this. First, the manager: manager: <Sensor.Manager object at 0xb7b9efec> ok, then Manager.getStatus(self=<Sensor.Manager object at 0xb77cde8c>) => {"a": "b", "c": "d"} None None is the return of SensorSingleton.getStatus(), now, my questions are: - Shouldn't the manager be the same in the first print and the second, that is, the id is different, shouldn't it be the same ? - What happened with all the output of SensorSingleton.getStatus() ? there's no trace of it (but there's output of the method it calls). - Why doesn't the SensorSingleton.getStatus() return the return value of manager.getStatus(), it's a very straight forward call to it and return it. Thank you. -- Pupeno <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> (http://pupeno.com) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list