The solution might be dead simple but I just cannot figure out at the
moment.

For example this is what I need in the simplest form

class myclass():
 def __init__(self,name):
 self.name=name

for count,data in enumerate(some list):
  instance_count=myclass()
  instance_count.name=data

print instances

Sounds like a use for a list:

  instances = []
  for count, data in enumerate(some_list):
    # 1) camel-case is preferred for classnames
    # 2) since your __init__() expects the name
    # pass it in, instead of setting it later
    instance = MyClass(data)
    instances.append(instance)

This can be written in a slightly more condensed-yet-readable list-comprehension form as:

  instances = [MyClass(data) for data in some_list]

You then have a list/array of instances you can print:

  print instances

or pick off certain items from it:

  print instances[42]

-tkc



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

Reply via email to