On Tue, 14 Sep 2010 16:38:50 +0200, Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
> And additionally, but simply not using staticmethods at all. It's a > rather obscure feature of python - usually, classmethods are what is > considered a static method in other languages. Are you sure about that? I know Java isn't necessarily "other languages", but my understanding is that static methods in Java are the same as static methods in Python -- they're essentially ordinary functions glued to a class, and they don't receive either the instance or the class as an argument. http://leepoint.net/notes-java/flow/methods/50static-methods.html (Aside: I don't know about others, but I find that article *incredibly* hard to read. E.g. Static methods typically take all they data from parameters and compute something from those parameters, with no reference to variables. What, parameters aren't variables? What about local variables? I know what they *mean*, but it causes a double-take every time I read it. And when they distinguish between *classes* and *objects*, that's another double-take, because of course in Python classes are objects.) C# seems to be the same: http://dotnetperls.com/static-method as is C++ (I believe), except I'm too lazy to find a good reference. -- Steven -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list