>>>>> Robert Dailey <rcdai...@gmail.com> (RD) wrote: >RD> Hey, >RD> I have a class that I want to have a different base class depending on >RD> a parameter that I pass to its __init__method. For example >RD> (pseudocode):
>RD> class MyDerived( self.base ): >RD> def __init__( self, base ): >RD> self.base = base >RD> Something like that... and then I would do this: >RD> foo = MyDerived( MyBase() ) What do you want? As you write it now foo would be an instance of MyDerived, but you say you want to have a class with a different base class... So does this mean that foo should become that class or that foo should become an instance of a new anonymous class that has a specified base class? And on the other hand is MyBase the required base class. But you pass an instance of MyBase, not MyBase itself. As you have it above MyBase() should be a class, therefore MyBase should be a metaclass. Or is that not what you want? -- Piet van Oostrum <p...@cs.uu.nl> URL: http://pietvanoostrum.com [PGP 8DAE142BE17999C4] Private email: p...@vanoostrum.org -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list