En Sun, 18 Feb 2007 14:14:41 -0300, goodwolf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió:
> On Feb 18, 9:17 am, "Gabriel Genellina" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> En Sun, 18 Feb 2007 04:20:33 -0300, goodwolf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >> escribió: >> >> > I suppose that you wont get class name into its code (or before >> > definition end) but not into a method definition. >> >> > import sys >> >> > def getCodeName(deap=0): >> > return sys._getframe(deap+1).f_code.co_name >> >> > class MyClass (object): >> > name = getCodeName() + '!' >> >> What's the advantage over MyClass.__name__? >> >> -- >> Gabriel Genellina > >>>> class C(object): > ... name = C.__name__ > ... > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? > File "<stdin>", line 2, in C > NameError: name 'C' is not defined >>>> I were asking, why do you want a "name" attribute since "__name__" already exists and has the needed information. And worst, using an internal implementation function to do such task. -- Gabriel Genellina -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list