A Python newbie, but some basic understanding of how classes, objects etc work in eg VB.Net. However, I'm struggling a little to translate this knowledge into the Python context.
I'm trying to teach myself this aspect of Python by working up a trial project, part of which calls for pulling in data from a serial data connection at regular intervals. It looked sensible to place all the comms procedures/functions in their own class and module and make calls to those functions from an object instantiated in a main controlling module. But I'm struggling to get this working - not sure whether it's a fundamental misunderstanding of the use of classes in Python, syntax errors pure and simple or, most likely, a combination of both! Maybe I could provide some outline code as an illustration: Let's say I define the class in a module called comms.py. The class isn't really going to inherit from any other class (except presumably in the most primitive base-class sense, which is presumably automatic and implicit in using the class keyword). Let's call the class serial_link. So in comms.py I have: class serial_link: def __init__(self): Try Import serial # the pyserial library Except ImportException #Error handling def openPort(self): Try #Code to try opening serial port Return "Success" Except SerialException Return "Failure" Then in my separate main calling module I might have: Import comms serlink=comms.seral_link #Create instance of serial_link class print serlink.openPort The last line I'm hoping would print Success or Failure. But I just seem to get some internal reference to the openPort function enclosed in <>. So why doesn't it work please? I may be making multiple errors here but as far as I can see the syntax seems right. For this particular example, I don't need to pass any arguments from the 'seriallink.openPort' function so haven't included any parentheses (or are they mandatory even if empty?) I could go on with the explanations etc, but it may be simplest to see if anyone can spot a howler straight out. TIA for anyone willing to help -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list