To jigglypuff: Remember asking how a class could call a function exterior to the class but located in the program where the class is defined? I really liked your question because I did not know or even think that this was possible. I thought the methods would be out of scope to the class. Well, now I have found two ways that this is possible. (I believe you found one of the two because you later said that your mistake was a simple typo.) It can be achieved by defining the exterior function before the class is defined, and then calling it directly from within the class; or you can pass the memory location of the function to the class so that the class can then call it. # This program demonstrates two ways a Class can call an exterior function. def main_function(f,a): f(a) def minor_function(par): print("You sent '"+str(par)+"'!") class Test_Class(): minor_function("hi!") main_function(minor_function,"Hello World") # Notice that in omitting the parentheses from the passed function, # the function is not executed, rather the location of the function # is passed instead. print() myclass = Test_Class()