On 28 авг, 16:07, Bruno Desthuilliers <bruno. 42.desthuilli...@websiteburo.invalid> wrote: > zaur a écrit : > > > > > On 26 авг, 17:13, "Diez B. Roggisch" <de...@nospam.web.de> wrote: > >> Whom am we to judge? Sure if you propose this, you have some usecases in > >> mind - how about you present these > > > Ok. Here is a use case: object initialization. > > > For example, > > > person = Person(): > > name = "john" > > age = 30 > > address = Address(): > > street = "Green Street" > > no = 12 > > > vs. > > > person = Person() > > person.name = "john" > > person.age = 30 > > address = person.address = Address() > > address.street = "Green Street" > > address.no = 12 > > Err... Looks like you really should read the FineManual(tm) - > specifically, the parts on the __init__ method. > > class Person(object): > def __init__(self, name, age, address): > self.name = name > self.age = age > self.address = address > > class Address(object): > def __init__(self, street, no): > self.no = no > self.street = street > > person = Person( > name="john", > age=30, > address = Address( > street="Green Street", > no=12 > ) > )
What are you doing if 1) classes Person and Address imported from foreign module 2) __init__ method is not defined as you want? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list