Order in metaclass
Michele Simionato
michele.simionato at gmail.com
Fri Oct 15 00:37:10 EDT 2004
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Fri Oct 15 00:37:10 EDT 2004
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Carlos Ribeiro <carribeiro at gmail.com> wrote in message news:<mailman.4957.1097770559.5135.python-list at python.org>... > On Thu, 14 Oct 2004 14:51:52 GMT, Michael Hudson <mwh at python.net> wrote: > > bokr at oz.net (Bengt Richter) writes: > > > > > IIRC it was Guido himself who let the cat out of the bag about a > > > function, in some early metaclass notes. But maybe I don't RC ;-) > > > > I don't get the fuss about a function vs a class for the value of > > __metaclass__. It's a callable. It gets called. No mystery *here* > > :) > > I think it has something to do with the intended working of > metaclasses. After all, they're called meta_classes_, not > metafunctions :-) But on a more serious note: in other languages, such > as Smalltalk, metaclasses are a standard part of the language, and are > _classes_. There is a _metaclass hierarchy_, superimposed to the class > hierarchy. Metaclasses are supposed to be classes because they can be > inherited from, for example. And I believe that was only by accident, > and not by a explicit design choice, that Python's implementation > accepts any callable as a metaclass. Using a "metafunction" is a kind of abuse, yes. Nevertheless, I used this trick to resolve the metaclass conflict: http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/204197c Later on, I also found a way to avoid the usage of the meta-function, but it was too brain-exploder to publish ;-) Michele Simionato
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