On 2010-08-08, Costin Gament <costin.gam...@gmail.com> wrote: > Thank you for your answer, but it seems I didn't make myself clear. > Take the code: > class foo: > a = 0 > b = 0 > c1 = foo() > c1.a = 5 > c2 = foo() > print c2.a > 5 > > Somehow, when I try to acces the 'a' variable in c2 it has the same > value as the 'a' variable in c1. Am I missing something?
Others have told you that at a and b belong to the class object rather then to the instance objects. Perhaps this will demonstrate the difference: >>> class foo(): ... def __init__(self): ... self.a = 0 ... self.b = 0 ... >>> c1 = foo() >>> c1.a = 5 >>> c2 = foo() >>> print c2.a 0 >>> -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list