On Mon, Feb 27, 2012 at 3:09 PM, John Salerno <johnj...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Feb 27, 1:39 am, Chris Rebert <c...@rebertia.com> wrote: >> On Sun, Feb 26, 2012 at 11:24 PM, John Salerno <johnj...@gmail.com> wrote: >> > Hi everyone. I created a custom class and had it inherit from the >> > "dict" class, and then I have an __init__ method like this: >> >> > def __init__(self): >> > self = create() >> >> > The create function creates and returns a dictionary object. Needless >> > to say, this is not working. When I create an instance of the above >> > class, it is simply an empty dictionary rather than the populated >> > dictionary being created by the create function. Am I doing the >> > inheritance wrong, or am I getting the above syntax wrong by assigning >> > the return value to self? >> >> Assignment to `self` has no effect outside the method in question; >> Python uses call-by-object (http://effbot.org/zone/call-by-object.htm >> ) for argument passing. >> Even in something like C++, I believe assignment to `this` doesn't work. >> >> > I know I could do self.variable = create() and that works fine, but I >> > thought it would be better (and cleaner) simply to use the instance >> > itself as the dictionary, rather than have to go through an instance >> > variable. >> >> Call the superclass (i.e. dict's) initializer (which you ought to be >> doing anyway): >> super(YourClass, self).__init__(create()) >> >> Cheers, >> Chris >> --http://rebertia.com > > Thanks. This ended up working: > > def __init__(self): > self = super().__init__(create_board()) > > Is that what you meant for me to do? Why did assigning to self work in > this case, but not the original case?
It didn't do anything and still isn't doing anything. In Python, names are assigned to objects self -> <Object1> ^ foo -------| Reassigning a name does not change the value, so self = create() Just makes an object2 self -> <Object2> foo ---> <Object1> The reason it's working here is because the super().__init__() call modifies the existing object in place. It returns None, so you're setting self = None but that doesn't matter because of what I explained before about how assigning to self doesn't actually change anything. > -- > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list