2012/10/29 Johannes Bauer <dfnsonfsdu...@gmx.de>: > Hi there, > > I'm currently looking for a good solution to the following problem: I > have two classes A and B, which interact with each other and which > interact with the user. Instances of B are always created by A. > > Now I want A to call some private methods of B and vice versa (i.e. what > C++ "friends" are), but I want to make it hard for the user to call > these private methods. > > Currently my ugly approach is this: I delare the internal methods > private (hide from user). Then I have a function which gives me a > dictionary of callbacks to the private functions of the other objects. > This is in my opinion pretty ugly (but it works and does what I want). > > I'm pretty damn sure there's a nicer (prettier) solution out there, but > I can't currently think of it. Do you have any hints? > > Best regards, > Joe >
And how are you declaring methods private? Because there is no real private attribute in Python, if you declare them with a starting "_" they are still perfectly accessible.. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list