On Mon, Sep 8, 2008 at 2:35 PM, AON LAZIO <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi again pythoners,
     I notice in the class of a code having (object) and (type) attached to
the name of the class.
I know that in other cases, that means the class inherits methods and
properties from other but
In this case, what does it mean?

The very same thing. Why should it have a different meaning ?

For the record :

- 'object' is the base class for 'new-style' classes - that is, the 'new' (hem) object model that came with Python 2.2 (released december 2001 - so it's not that 'new'). The old one - known as 'classic classes' has been kept so far for backward compat only, and will finally disappear with Python 3.x.

- 'type' is the base metaclass. Python's classes being objects, they have to be instances of a class - known as the metaclass. To avoid metametaclasses, metametametaclasses etc ad infinitum, 'type' is an instance of itself. And FWIW, a subclass of 'object', which is itself an instance of 'type' (usually, brains start melting here...)

You'll find more informations (and hopefully clearer explanations) here:
http://www.python.org/doc/newstyle/

and of course in the FineManual(tm):
http://docs.python.org/ref/datamodel.html

HTH
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Reply via email to