Defining class files
Steve Holden
sholden at holdenweb.com
Thu Mar 29 08:22:21 EST 2001
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Thu Mar 29 08:22:21 EST 2001
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"Neil Benn" <neil.benn at cambridgeantibody.com> wrote in message news:3ac33343$0$12248$ed9e5944 at reading.news.pipex.net... > Hello, > > Sorry to ask such a basic question but - > > I'm wokring through the tutorial and have reached the section on classes in > Python. Working through the example on classes I have entered the class > using the interpreter:- > > class MyClass: > "A simple example class" > i = 12345 > def f(x): > return 'hello world' > > This worked fine when I typed:- > > >>> x=MyClass() > >>> x.f() > 'Hello World' > > However, I then tried to write the class as an external text file, > using:- > > class YourClass: > "A simple example class" > i = 12345 > def f(x): > return 'hello world' > > I then imported the class, tried to assign the class and ivoke a method > :- > > >>> y = YourClass() > Traceback (innermost last): > File "<console>", line 1, > TypeError: call of non-func > > This seemed a bit strange, so I investigated the Your class and it > seemed to be a module. > > >>> YourClass > <module YourClass at 2584541> > > The text file is saved as YourClass.py - is this the problem, should > class files have different terminaters in their filename?? > > Any/all help would be most appreciated!! > The confusion here appears to be about namespaces. Since you now have a YourClass module, which defines a YourClass class, the correct way to instantiate (create an instance of) the class would be: y = YourClass.YourClass() Here the module name is qualified by the name of the object. Does this help? regards Steve
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