Martin Hewitson wrote: > Dear list, > > I'm relatively new to Python and have googled and googled but haven't > found a reasonable answer to this question, so I thought I'd ask it here. > > I'm beginning a large Python project which contains many packages, modules > and classes. The organisation of those is clear to me. > > Now, the classes can contain many methods (100s of data analysis methods) > which operate on instances of the class they belong to. These methods can > be long and complex. So if I put these methods all in the module file > inside the class, the file will get insanely long. Reading on google, the > answer is usually "refactor", but that really doesn't make sense here. > It's just that the methods are many, and each method can be a long piece > of code. So, is there a way to put these methods in their own files and > have them 'included' in the class somehow? I read a little about mixins > but all the solutions looked very hacky. Is there an official python way > to do this? I don't like having source files with 100's of lines of code > in, let alone 1000's.
You googled, found the right answer ("refactor"), didn't like it and are now looking to cure the symptoms of the original problem? Seriously, a good editor can deal with a long source file, but a class with hundreds of methods will bring trouble to any old brain. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list