Thanks a lot to all three of you: that helped me understand the errors of my ways! You just saved me a few more hours of head-scratching;-)
A few replies to the questions and comments by Steven: Steven D'Aprano <steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info> wrote: > On Thu, 20 Dec 2012 20:39:19 +0000, Jens Thoms Toerring wrote: > > and my expectation was that the static variable 'r' of class R > The terminology we prefer here is "class attribute", not "static > variable". Attributes are always assigned in dynamic storage, whether > they are per-instance or on the class. I'm comimg from C/C++ and that's were my terminology is from, I know I still have to learn a lot more about Python;-) <good advice snipped> > > In my "real" code it's unfortunately not > > possible to pass that number to whatever is going to use it in the > > other file, I have to simulate a kind of global variable > > shared between different files. > Well, I find that hard to believe. "Not convenient"? I could believe > that. "Difficult"? Maybe. "Tricky"? I could even believe that. But "not > possible"? No, I don't believe that it is impossible to pass variables > around as method arguments. You are rather likely right and I probably should have written: "I don't see any way to pass that variable to the object that is supposed to use it". Perhaps you have an idea how it could be done correctly when I explain the complete picture: I'm writing a TCP server, based on SocketServer: server = SocketServer.TCPServer((192.168.1.10, 12345), ReqHandler) where ReqHandler is the name of a class derived from SocketServer.BaseRequestHandler class ReqHandler(SocketServer.BaseRequestHandler): ... A new instance of this class is gernerated for each connection request to the server. In the call that creates the server I can only specify the name of the class but no arguments to be passed to it on instantiation - at least I found nothing in the docu- mentation. On the other hand I need to get some information into this class and thus the only idea I came up with was to use some kind of global variable for the purpose. Perhaps there's a much better way to do that but I haven't found one yet. Or perhaps it is an omission in the design of SocketServer or (more likely) my mis-understanding of the documentation (as I wrote I'm relatively new to Python). Thnak you and best regards, Jens -- \ Jens Thoms Toerring ___ j...@toerring.de \__________________________ http://toerring.de -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list