Got a question for you all... I noticed a behaviour in python class creation that is strange, to say the least.
When creating a class with data members but no __init__ method. Python deals differently with data members that are muatable and immutables. Ex: class A(object): stringData = "Whatever" listData = [] instance = A() Will have data members instantiated as expected (instance.stringData == "Whatever" and instance.listData == []) instance.listData.append("SomeString") instance.stringData = "Changed" Now if I do secondInstance = A() it will come with the listData containing the SomeString appended to the instance... this is clearly not normal Especially that the stringData of Second instance contains the "Whatever" text. If the behaviour was at least consistant... but it is not... Am I coing nuts or is this by desing, if so it is very misleading... The two instances are sharing the same list, but not the same string ... I did not declare the list to be static in any way.... Why does it behave like this ? Éric -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list