On 3/21/2020 1:19 PM, duncan smith wrote:
Hello,
I have a class I wrote for Python2 that needs to be made to work
on Python3. On Python2 it inherited from long, so it needs to inherit
from int on Python3.
In general, if you want code to work on both 2 and 3, look into the
bi-version pac
On Sun, Mar 22, 2020 at 11:31 AM duncan smith wrote:
> but (tentatively) opted for something that avoided creating new names at
> the module level. If it doesn't look too terrible I might stick with it
> for now (although I am quite tempted to go back to the above). Thanks
> Skip and Chris.
Nah,
On 21/03/2020 21:55, Skip Montanaro wrote:
>> import sys
>>
>> class C_hash(int if sys.version_info.major >= 3 else long):
> ...
>
> There's nothing incorrect with your solution. Chris offered another. I
> was going to suggest you consider running your code through 2to3 to
> see what it does. I cr
> import sys
>
> class C_hash(int if sys.version_info.major >= 3 else long):
...
There's nothing incorrect with your solution. Chris offered another. I
was going to suggest you consider running your code through 2to3 to
see what it does. I created a C_hash class similar to yours:
class C_hash(lon
On Sun, Mar 22, 2020 at 4:21 AM duncan smith wrote:
>
> Hello,
> I have a class I wrote for Python2 that needs to be made to work
> on Python3. On Python2 it inherited from long, so it needs to inherit
> from int on Python3. The following works, but I'm not sure it's the
> cleanest solution.
Hello,
I have a class I wrote for Python2 that needs to be made to work
on Python3. On Python2 it inherited from long, so it needs to inherit
from int on Python3. The following works, but I'm not sure it's the
cleanest solution. It's the first time I've wanted / needed to make a
parent class