Hello pythons, I have little problem with understanding conversions in python. I've written a little class - nothing much, just to try out Python a little - containing the following method:
def __repr__(self): """Serializes the note. Currently the format of notes isn't decided upon. XML output is projected.""" return "Due: " + str(self.dateDue) + \ "\nDate: " + str(self.dateCreated) + \ "\nSubject: " + self.subject + \ "\n" + self.content The fields "dateDue" and "dateCreated" contain datetime.date objects. Now when I try to serialize the whole thing: >>> myNote Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? File "notes.py", line 81, in __repr__ return "Due: " + str(self.dateDue) + \ TypeError: cannot concatenate 'str' and 'datetime.date' objects I tryed different variant before I wrapped "self.dateDue" in a str() constructor: I tried to put it in brackets, or call its .isoformat() method. Nothing works. It still complains that I was trying to concatenate a string with a date, but I really wanna concatenate a string with a string! Could anyone please tell me what I am doing wrong? Greetings, Björn -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list