Paul Novak 写道: > A lot of the complexity of design patterns in Java falls away in > Python, mainly because of the flexibility you get with dynamic typing. > I agree with this very much ! In java or C++ or all such static typing and compiled languages , the type is fixed on in the compile phrase , so for the flexible at the runtime , we often need to program to interface . For example , we do in java :
implement I{...} class A implement I{...} class B implement I{...} oprate(I var) // we can pass A's instance or B's instance here and in C++ : class Abstract{...} class A : Abstract{...} class B : Abstract{...} oprate(Abstract var) // pass the A's instance or B's instance here But in python , type is dynamic , and name is bind at runtime , so we can pass any variable as we want ! This feather make python not need for redundant class inherits and interfaces which are the core of the GoF's design patterns I think ! > For a Pythonic Perspective on Patterns, "Python Programming Patterns" > by Thomas W. Christopher is definitely worth tracking down. It looks > like it is out of print, but you can find used copies on Amazon. > > Regards, > > Paul. > > > This sounds like an article crying out to be written, > "(Learning) Design Patterns with Python". > > Has it been written already? > > Cheers, > Terry > > > Bruce Eckel began writing "Thinking In Python" it was last updated > in 2001. > -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list