I have a class that I call Borg that starts like this: class Borg(dict):
static_state = {} def __init__(self): self.__dict__ = self.static_state so that I can access the same data from anywhere within any module or function just by instantiating one. This is used in a cherrypy web app. I got to thinking about whether there would be confusion when multiple users are eventually hitting the site at the same time. Everything seems ok. Each time I hit the app and examine the Borg() at the beginning, it seems to have no attributes. This is what I want. My question is why this seems to work. I had the idea that there was a class object that is created when the file containing the definition is read, which actually contains the static information that is later accessed by instances. Isn't this done when the cherrypy app first loads, rather than each time a browser hits the app? Otherwise, where is the individual data stored for each of two simultaneous hits of the web page? Thanks, Tobiah -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list