Here's a lesson plan working directly in the shell, though it'd be fine to call this up as pre-saved scaffolding.
Sometimes you just wanna project and type live while talking, students following along, asking questions, or watching on ShowMeDo or one of those. >>> class Reptile: def __init__(self): self.blood = "cold" self.me = 1 self.free = True >>> class Mammal: def __init__(self): self.me = 1 self.blood = "warm" self.free = True def nurse(self): return "milk" >>> class PSF_snake(Mammal, Reptile): def say(self, something): print something >>> me = PSF_snake() >>> me.blood 'warm' >>> me.nurse() 'milk' >>> class PSF_snake(Reptile, Mammal): def say(self, something): print something >>> me = PSF_snake() >>> me.blood 'cold' >>> me.nurse() 'milk' >>> Notes to teachers: Notice that it matters in what order the parent classes get listed (fed to the child class) in the class definition. In the Mammal, Reptile case, the blood is warm, whereas if Reptile is listed first, the blood is cold. Notice also that you get a nursing method either way, because of how method resolution looks. If Mammal is listed after the Reptile class then the interpreter simply has to look a little further into its heritage, in order to find the right DNA. Kirby _______________________________________________ Edu-sig mailing list Edu-sig@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/edu-sig