Quenton, What kind of instances do you want to create? An instance has to be an instance of something. You mention creating instances "of a method", what do you mean by that?
Anyway, assuming you are new to Python here is a basic intro about objects and classes: Think of a class as a blueprint and the objects are object built from that blueprint. The object are called 'instances' of the class. Creating an object of a specific class is called instantiating. So if you have a blueprint for a car you use it to make a car. A car is an instance instantiated from the car's blueprint. Simple Example: class Car: def __init__(self,color): self.color=color def drive(self): print "The",self.color,"car is driving" That's a simple Car class i.e. the blueprint. It will make any car of a specific color. To make an actual car object do: jetta=Car("blue") You have created an _instance_ of a class Car called jetta. Now, according to the blueprint, you car will have one method you can call and you call it like this:: jetta.drive() and you should get the output "The blue car is driving". Three things to notice: 1) 'self' is the first argument inside any method of the class. Both __init__ and drive get it. Self references the object of the class itself when those methods are called. For example the __init__ method sets the color of the car. But it has to know where the car object is so it can set its color. The car object itself is represented by 'self' and then we set its color using self.color 2) the __init__ method is called a "magic" method. It can be called _for you_ at a specific time. The __init__ method is used to initialize a class object. So the object is created by Python then its __init__ method is called after that so you can customize it. Imagine that Python makes a car for you and then it gives it to your __init__ method for customization. Your __init__ method paints it a certain color and you have your new car ready to go! 3) if you noticed from the semantics or form 2), __init__ does not create an instance of a class by itself. It only customizes an already created instance that it gets through the self argument. There is a magic method called __new__ that Python uses for you to create an instance of a class but with very very very rare exceptions you don't even need to know about it (I don't even know what its parameters are, because in all these years I have never had to use it). Hope this helps, I assumed you are a new Python user that is why I presented a simplistic example. Please see some Python tutorials and documenation, you can search on Google for them. Regards, Nick Vatamaniuc Quenton Bonds wrote:. > Hello > I am trying to understand the abilities and limitation of creating an > instance. First I will give you my understanding then please steer me > in the right direction. > > Abiities > 1. The two ways to create an instance is def method(self) & > __int__(self, other, instances,...) > 2. By creating an instance of a method; the functions of that method > can be used through out the > program in a fashion such as self.methodofprogram(parameters) > Limitations > 3. One cannot create an instance of a class. > 4. An instance can only perform functions that are provided from the > method it was instanced from. > > 5. Is there any other key information I am missing. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list