On 28 nov, 16:53, "Diez B. Roggisch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I just want to make a jquery wrapper, and let people use it to write > > jquery call on the server side in a python way ... > > > o is a object, imagine a widget : like a textarea or input box > > "js" is a special attribut of "o", which will let you write javascript > > for this object. > > > o=MyObject() > > o.js.toggleClass("clean").hide() > > > When I will render the object to a http/html output : it will generate > > something like (a javascript call): $("#idOfMyObject").toggleClass > > ("clean").hide(); > > > It's all what I want in the real world. > > I wouldn't do something like that (with the "()" tricks at the end on > > the chain, because I don't find it really readable/natural) > > > o=MyObject() > > o.js.toggleClass("clean").hide()() > > > The code I gave before (the JQueryCaller) was just my try to do what I > > want ... If there is another way : I take ;-) > > But there must be *something* on this end of the chain, because how is > python otherwise to distinguish betwenn > > os.js.toggleClass().hide() > os.js.toggleClass().hide().show() > > ? > > Now the question is if the action that is to take must be on the object > itself. Maybe it works for you to make the assignment to some other object > do the trick, or additon. Something like this: > > self.js_calls += os.js.toggleClass().hide() > > Then in the __iadd__-method of js_calls you can render the right side. > > Diez
nice idea ... but you use an action on the "+=" and __add__ ... it makes sense. but peter has found the way ! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list