On 26 авг, 21:11, "Rami Chowdhury" <rami.chowdh...@gmail.com> wrote: > > person = Person(): > > name = "john" > > age = 30 > > address = Address(): > > street = "Green Street" > > no = 12 > > Can you clarify what you mean? Would that define a Person class, and an > Address class? I suppose that someone already define classes Person ans Address. For example, in this stupid way in a foreign module:
class Person(object): pass class Address(object): pass and the following statements person = Person(): name = "john" age = 30 address = Address(): street = "Green Street" no = 12 are constructing an instance as follows: person = Person() person.name = "john" person.age = 30 address = person.address = Address() address.street = "Green Street" address.no = 12 > If you are expecting those classes to be already defined, please bear in > mind that if you want, you can do this: > > > > > class Person(object): > > def __init__(self, name='Nemo', age=0, address=None): > self.name = name > self.age = age > self.address = address > > > > > class Address(object): > > def __init__(self, street=None, no=None): > self.street = street > self.no = no > > > > > otherperson = Person( > > name = 'Bob', > age = 26, > address = Address( > street = 'Blue Street', > no = 1 > ) > ) > Yes, that's right. I aware about this way of instance initialization. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list