On Sat, Oct 25, 2008 at 12:25 AM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Thank you,James. > My original idea was to study all the contents of any object. I can do > it by using module ctypes.
You can simply just query it's attributes. Use __dict__ or dir(obj) Example: >>> x = 10 >>> dir(x) ['__abs__', '__add__', '__and__', '__class__', '__cmp__', '__coerce__', '__delattr__', '__div__', '__divmod__', '__doc__', '__float__', '__floordiv__', '__getattribute__', '__getnewargs__', '__hash__', '__hex__', '__index__', '__init__', '__int__', '__invert__', '__long__', '__lshift__', '__mod__', '__mul__', '__neg__', '__new__', '__nonzero__', '__oct__', '__or__', '__pos__', '__pow__', '__radd__', '__rand__', '__rdiv__', '__rdivmod__', '__reduce__', '__reduce_ex__', '__repr__', '__rfloordiv__', '__rlshift__', '__rmod__', '__rmul__', '__ror__', '__rpow__', '__rrshift__', '__rshift__', '__rsub__', '__rtruediv__', '__rxor__', '__setattr__', '__str__', '__sub__', '__truediv__', '__xor__'] >>> cheers James -- -- -- "Problems are solved by method" -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list