On Sat, Oct 15, 2011 at 4:00 PM, Shane <gshanemil...@verizon.net> wrote: > Hi, > > When one writes, > >> className='Employee' >> baseClasses = ... >> dictionary = { ... } >> newClass = type( className, <baseClasses>, dictionary) > > in what module does newClass belong? If it's the current module
That does seem to be the case. > what code > do I run to print out the name of that module in a.b.c... form? newClass.__module__ is a string containing the (apparently) qualified name of the module wherein newClass was defined. <snip> > Final question. If, as an academic exercise I wanted to recursively > dump > all the classes in a module (and its sub-modules) would I do this? [I > use > some pseudo code]: > > def dump( namespace ): > for i in dir(namespace): > if i is a class: > print i > elif i is a module: > dump(i) > > dump( <top-level-module> ) Pretty much, though `i` is just a string, so you'll need to use getattr() to get the actual value of the corresponding variable. You may also need to watch out for circular references so that your function doesn't get stuck in an infinite loop. FYI, `inspect` module had functions to test for class-ness and module-ness. http://docs.python.org/library/inspect.html Cheers, Chris -- http://rebertia.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list