Hello, I would like to use a callable object as a method of a class. So, when I have such normal class:
class f: version = 17 def a(self): return self.version f1 = f() print f1.a() I want to change it to something like that: class add: def __call__(self, another_self): return another_self.version class f: version = 17 a = add() f1 = f() print f1.a() However, the second version does not work. I think I understand why. That's because "a" inside f1 is not a function (but an object). So f1.a is not a method. So when I do f1.a(), the implicit argument self is not passed. Q1: Am I right? Is this the problem? Q2: What can I do to make it work? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list