Hallöchen! Sebastian \"lunar\" Wiesner writes:
> Torsten Bronger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > >> Bruno Desthuilliers writes: >> >>> Torsten Bronger a écrit : >>> >>>> Bruno Desthuilliers writes: >>>> >>>> [...] >>>> >>>> Just like this. However, the compiler could add "self" to >>>> non-decorated methods which are defined within "class". >>> >>> What's defined within classes are plain functions. It's actually >>> the lookup mechanism that wraps them into methods (and manage to >>> insert the current instance as first argument). >> >> And why does this make the implicit insertion of "self" >> difficult? I could easily write a preprocessor which does it >> after all. > > Who said, that it would be "difficult"? He just corrected your > statement about definitions inside a class, and did not make any > assumption about making "self" implicit. If it is not the implementation, I don't see why the "definition inside a class" matters at all. It can be realised as a transformation of the syntax tree and would even be transparent for the compiling steps after it. Tschö, Torsten. -- Torsten Bronger, aquisgrana, europa vetus Jabber ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list