On 10 Sep, 13:35, TheFlyingDutchman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Sep 10, 2:28 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > > > > > Hi, > > > I have the following class - > > > class TestOutcomes: > > PASSED = 0 > > FAILED = 1 > > ABORTED = 2 > > > plus the following code - > > > testResult = TestOutcomes.PASSED > > > testResultAsString > > if testResult == TestOutcomes.PASSED: > > testResultAsString = "Passed" > > elif testResult == TestOutcomes.FAILED : > > testResultAsString = "Failed" > > else: > > testResultAsString = "Aborted" > > > But it would be much nicer if I had a function to covert to string as > > part of the TestOutcomes class. How would I implement this? > > > Thanks, > > > Barry > > The equivalent to Java's toString() is __str__() in Python: > > class TestOutcomes: > PASSED = 0 > FAILED = 1 > ABORTED = 2 > > def __init__(self,outcome): > self.outcome = outcome > > def __str__(self): > if self.outcome == TestOutcomes.PASSED: > return "Passed" > elif self.outcome == TestOutcomes.FAILED : > return "Failed" > else: > return "Aborted" > > if __name__ == "__main__": > testResult = TestOutcomes(TestOutcomes.ABORTED) > print testResult > testResult = TestOutcomes(TestOutcomes.FAILED) > a = testResult.__str__() > print a > > Aborted > Failed- Dölj citerad text - > > - Visa citerad text -
Would this be crazy? - class TestOutcomes: PASSED = "PASSED" FAILED = "FAILED" ABORTED = "ABORTED"
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