Hallöchen! Gabriel Genellina writes:
> On 30 dic, 19:08, Torsten Bronger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote: > >> [...] >> >> But then it is not unicode but Excerpt which I don't want. The >> idea is to buffer the unicode representation in order to gain >> efficiency. Otherwise, a lot of unicode conversion would take >> place. > > Still I don't see why you want to inherit from unicode. Because I want to use some of its functionality and override the rest. And now, all I want to do is to convert the current Excerpt object into a real unicode object that represents the same string. Outside the object, I'd simply say unicode(my_excerpt), but this doesn't work within the __unicode__ method of Excerpt. > [...] > >>>> However, unicode(super(Excerpt, self)) is also forbidden >>>> because super() allows attribute access only (why by the way?). >>> >>> (because its purpose is to allow cooperative methods in a >>> multiple inheritance hierarchy) >> >> It would be more useful, however, if it returned full-fledged >> objects. Or if there was another way to get a full-fledged >> mother object. > > There is no such "mother object", in Python an instance is usually > a whole unique object, not an onion-like structure. But the mother object could be created. I simply see no reason why "super(MotherClass, self)[key]" must fail, except maybe because it's harder to realise in the underlying implementation of Python. Tschö, Torsten. -- Torsten Bronger, aquisgrana, europa vetus Jabber ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (See http://ime.webhop.org for further contact info.) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list