cmckenzie wrote:
Hi.
I'm new to Python, but I've managed to make some nice progress up to
this point. After some code refactoring, I ran into a class design
problem and I was wondering what the experts thought. It goes
something like this:
class module:
nestedClass
def __init__():
self.nestedClass = nested()
print self.nestedClass.nestedVar
class nested():
nestedVar = 1
def __init__(self):
print "Initialized..."
I can't figure out what the correct way to construct the "nested"
class so it can belong to "module".
I want a class level construct of "nested" to belong to "module", but
I keep getting nestedClass isn't defined.
My example isn't great or 100% accurate, but I hope you get the idea.
Thanks.
class module:
class nested:
nestedVar = 1
def __init__(self):
print "Initialized..."
def __init__(self):
self.nestedClass = module.nested()
print self.nestedClass.nestedVar
Python will not look into the current class scope when trying to resolve
"nested", that is why the explicit call including the scope is required.
The code above runs fine with python 2.5.
Jean-Michel
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