On Thu, Jan 15, 2009 at 10:18 PM, Jason Voegele <[email protected]> wrote: > On Tuesday 13 January 2009 09:53:08 pm Steven Woody wrote: >> In the book 'Rapid GUI Programming with Python and Qt', chapter 5, >> the author said that the 'super' method won't work in an example code, >> that is a override 'accept()' method, in the end of the 'accept()' >> method, one need to call base class's 'accept()' method. But if you >> write the code using something like 'super(.., self).accept(self)', it >> will fail, you have to rather write it as QDialog.accept(self). But >> in the same example program, in the form's __init__() method, it does >> use the 'super()' method without problem. >> >> So, my question is, in exactly what case I can not use super()? Thanks. > > My personal policy is to never use super() at all. It has some subtle and > dangerous behaviors that can really bite you if you're not careful. See here: > > http://fuhm.net/super-harmful/ >
So much thanks for your paper. If I am still curious about the answer for my original question, would anyone help? Thanks. _______________________________________________ PyQt mailing list [email protected] http://www.riverbankcomputing.com/mailman/listinfo/pyqt
