Hi, Sorry for replying so late. Your MUA apparently messes up the References:, so I saw you reply only now and by coincidence.
"Diez B. Roggisch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Nikolaus Rath schrieb: >> Hello, >> >> I am really surprised that I am asking this question on the mailing >> list, but I really couldn't find it on python.org/doc. >> >> Why is there no proper way to protect an instance variable from access >> in derived classes? >> >> I can perfectly understand the philosophy behind not protecting them >> from access in external code ("protection by convention"), but isn't >> it a major design flaw that when designing a derived class I first >> have to study the base classes source code? Otherwise I may always >> accidentally overwrite an instance variable used by the base class... > > Here we go again... > > http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/browse_thread/thread/188467d724b48b32/ > > To directly answer your question: that's what the __ (double > underscore) name mangling is for. I understand that it is desirable not to completely hide instance variables. But it seems silly to me that I should generally prefix almost all my instance variables with two underscores. I am not so much concerned about data hiding, but about not accidentally overwriting a variable of the class I'm inheriting from. And, unless I misunderstood something, this is only possible if I'm prefixing them with __. How is this problem solved in practice? I probably don't have a representative sample, but in the libraries that I have been using so far, there were a lot of undocumented (in the sense of: not being part of the public API) instance variables not prefixed with __. I have therefore started to first grep the source of all base classes whenever I introduce a new variable in my derived class. Is that really the way it's supposed to be? What if one of the base classes introduces a new variable at a later point? Best, -Nikolaus -- »It is not worth an intelligent man's time to be in the majority. By definition, there are already enough people to do that.« -J.H. Hardy PGP fingerprint: 5B93 61F8 4EA2 E279 ABF6 02CF A9AD B7F8 AE4E 425C -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list