Hi, As part of my GUI, I have lots of fields that people can fill in, defined like this:
self.selection = Pmw.EntryField(group.interior(), labelpos='w', label_text='Selection to use: ', value='(polymer)', ) I then use self.selection.get_value() and self.selection.set_value(), and those two functions are the only ways in which I care about self.selection. I've never really used properties, getters or setters before. I tried this, but it didn't work: def __init__(self): self._selection = Pmw.EntryField(group.interior(), labelpos='w', label_text='Selection to use: ', value='(polymer)', ) self.selection = property(self._selection.get_value (),self._selection.set_value()) Of course, I really have ~40 things that I'd like to do this for, not just one, so I'd like to find a fairly concise syntax. In case it helps, here's a complete example of me failing. I'd like it to print out "2" instead of "<property object at 0xe763f0>" class Foo(object): def __init__(self,val): self._val = val def get(self): return self._val def set(self,val): self._val = val class Bar(object): def __init__(self): self._v = Foo(2) self.v = property(self._v.get,self._v.set) b = Bar() print b.v -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list