On Mar 3, 6:07 pm, MRAB <pyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com> wrote: > On 04/03/2011 01:45, dude wrote: > > > > > I've been struggling with getting my class to behave the way I want > > it. > > > I have python module called ohYeah.py, defined as follows... > > #File Begin > > class foo: > > > def __init__(self, arg1): > > print arg1 > > self.ohYeah = arg1 > > > def whatwhat(self): > > return self.ohYeah > > #EOF > > > My goal is to be able to instantiate the class foo from another python > > module, like so: > > > # Example Usage > > f = foo("wow") > > j = foo("amazing") > > f.whatwhat() > > wow > > j.whatwhat() > > amazing > > # > > > However, I always get the "module not callable" error. After entering > > a "def __call__" method in class foo, still get the same problem. Can > > someone please point me in the right direction for being able to > > achieve the Example Usage above? I'm sure there is something trivial > > I'm missing, but after digging around online for a day, I couldn't > > find the missing piece. Thanks in advance. > > How are you importing it? > > It should be something like: > > from ohYeah import foo > > BTW, the recommendation is for class names to be CamelCase and modules > names to be lowercase.
That was the problem. I was using: import ohYeah Thanks! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list