>So mixins are just a sub-class [pun intended] of sub-classing?
>
>I've just found this:
>
>[quote]
>A mixin class is a parent class that is inherited from - but not as
>a means of specialization. Typically, the mixin will export services to a
>child class, but no semantics will be implied about t
I added some recipes to the Python Cookbook:
- listmixin
Use ListMixin to create custom list classes from a small subset of
list methods:
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/440656
- pytime
Improves on timeit by allowing you to time a function directly
(no
Nifty, Tim Peters responded to my e-mail. I must've said something
interesting. Cool, a PyCelebrity!
>[barnesc at engr.orst.edu]
>> ...
>> I've gotten bored and went back to one of my other projects:
>> reimplementing the Python builtin classes list(), set(),
>barnesc at engr.orst.edu wrote:
> > So my question is: are there any other *practical* applications of a
> > B-tree based list/set/dict ? In other words, is this module totally
> > worth coding, or is it just academic wankery and theoretical flim
> > flam ? :)
Hi again,
Since my linear algebra library appears not to serve any practical
need (I found cgkit, and that works better for me), I've gotten bored
and went back to one of my other projects: reimplementing the Python
builtin classes list(), set(), dict(), and frozenset() with balanced
trees (speci
t;> algebra module.
>>
>> The current targeted interface is:
>> http://oregonstate.edu/~barnesc/temp/linalg/
>
>Is this going to become free software. If yes, what license
>will you use?
>
>
>So my suggestions:
>
>In cases like these ones:
>
>