Hello, I have these types,
class A: def __init__(s): super().__init__() print("A") class B(A): def __init__(s): super().__init__() print("B") class C(A): def __init__(s): super().__init__() print("C") class D(B,C): def __init__(s): super().__init__() print("D") If I do (in 3.1) >>> d=D() A C B D Why this order? I thought, first to D, then B, then A. He prints "A". He comes back in B and prints "B". He goes to C. Then somehow he doesn't go again to A. He prints "C". Then back to D and prints "D". Thanks, Eric J. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list