On Thursday, June 27, 2019 at 8:30:21 PM UTC-5, DL Neil wrote: > I'm mystified by "literally given nothing".
I'm focusing there particularly on the syntax of writing "super()" without any arguments to it. However, internally it's getting fed stuff. > If a class has not defined an attribute, eg self.my_attribute, but the > base class has defined an attribute of that name, then self.my_attribute > will as initialised by the base class. Welcome to the intricacies of > managing scope! I'm thinking my problem was more fundamental here. I finally got the debugger to bypass all the calls to the internal super() implementation that are done on startup and run instead just a bit of user-specified code. It's looking like super() actually gobbles the self pointer that goes on to the stack when __init__ is first created and replaces it when its done by returning it again. I think. Maybe. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list