last day (15 days later) » 

14:36
Cbg
Which code are you asking about?
 
1 hour later…
15:49
Hi, currently in a meeting so I can't write a lot yet, but it's about the superclass call in __new__
Ok, well I'm around for the next hour or so before lunch
16:46
Meetings should be outlawed.
So, I think was confused about the way you determined the superclass by picking the subsequent class in the mro
Is that how a superclass is defined? Because when i inherit, it's usually the larent class, i.e. the preceding class in the mro.
But when I tried calling it instead I entered an eternal loop in my example.
My actual question is, is there a simple explanation for what exactly a superclass is and how it shoild be called? And if it is not simple, do you know good literature where I could learn it?
s/larent/parent
17:07
The topic you want to study is the mro, and how it is built up in single and multiple inheritances - if you create a simple hierarchy C extends B extends A, you'll see that the mro for C is [C, B, A, object]. Another tidbit is that super() is a very special thing, not just a reinterpretation of the self using the next class up the chain.
If there is multiple inheritance, then the classes are dropped into the mro in the same order as the inheritance list in the subclass declaration
D inherits from E and C (as in class D(E, C): -> D's mro is [D, E, C, B, A, object]
I'm doing this from memory, you should probably dabble with the interpreter to check these for yourself.
"How a superclass should be called" is a sticky problem.
Oh have to go, I've been invited to join co-workers for lunch
Back in about an hour
 
1 hour later…
18:23
Back from lunch now if you want to continue hearing me discuss more than I actually know about stuff
class A: pass
class B(A): pass
class C(B): pass
C.__mro__
Out[5]: (__main__.C, __main__.B, __main__.A, object)
class D: pass
class E(C, D): pass
E.__mro__
Out[8]: (__main__.E, __main__.C, __main__.B, __main__.A, __main__.D, object)
Interesting! D is way up there because it and A both inherit directly from object
18:45
So let's say i overload C's __new__, mixing it into E the way you did means that it needs to call B's __new__ by hand, lest i risk some important stuff down the mro doesn't get executed, right?
Urk, let me reread what you wrote...
If anything here is a mixin, it would be D, but that also means that I screwed up in declaring E. Mixins need to come first, so it would be class E(D,C): pass
class E(D, C): pass
E.__mro__
Out[10]: (__main__.E, __main__.D, __main__.C, __main__.B, __main__.A, object)
So in D.__new__, I can overload C's __new__
And if I use super() from D, it will naturally go to C - but only if D has been mixed in with C in some lower level class, in this case E. So D really can't know just who it's superclass is going to be.
Nice, i got it now
Thanks a lot, paul
:+1:
Oh, that's Slack!
Ok, back to main chat

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