monkey-patching a class you've just created is certainly not what you likely want to do
@Jonas if you're in a running interactive session, you need to reload the module that contains the function using importlib.reload (assuming python 3, and assuming I understand your scenario correctly)
I fixed a bug, but when I execute the function, it still throws the same error (but shows the edited and correct line). It can't be that I just have to restart Spyder everytime I fix a bug?
@idjaw I'm using peewee and I'm wrapping subclasses of peewee.Model in adapter classes which give me the interface I want. The thing is a lot of the code gets repeated in each of these "adapter" classes, so I wrote a class decorator that takes the subclass of peewee.Model as an argument and wraps the "adapter" class in Decorated class which hold a reference to the model that the adapter class adapts.
@Jovito It seems like you need to take a step back and re-think your design. I'm confused by your explanation and if you are dealing with wrapping your "stuff" around some library, then you probably need to think, similar to what Andras specified, creating some base class yourself
That's fine. You can either import importlib; importlib.reload(module_where_your_function_is), or specifically in ipython you can run reset which will clear your namespace and then you can run your script again with a clean slate
@Jonas well, on the other hand it's easy to trip yourself up with something left over from a previous iteration of your code in an interactive shell, so if you want to be sure it works you should run it in a clean session anyway
but of course I see where you're coming from, I "started" with MATLAB
I see you found out about the DLLs. I had a hard time with those at first. What I meant is I used MSYS to get gtk3. No pip so how did you install cx_Freeze?
And naturally that has pip installed and everything else. Thank you so much you are a lifesaver, You would not believe how long I've been struggling with this.