Frank Millman wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >> There aren't abstract classes in Python. They are all >> concrete. (snip) > I use the term 'abstract class' in the abstract sense :-) > > Say I have three classes where 90% of the attributes and methods are > common. It makes sense to create a base class with these attributes and > methods, and turn each of the three classes into a subclass which > inherits from the base class and overrides the bits that are unique to > each one. > > This is what I call an abstract class. Maybe there is a more correct > term.
Depends if instanciating this base class would make any sense. -- bruno desthuilliers python -c "print '@'.join(['.'.join([w[::-1] for w in p.split('.')]) for p in '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'.split('@')])" -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list