Hey folks, I am just starting off in python, but have good knowledge of both Java and C#. Now is the problem that I need to have multiple instances of one dictionary, that is not a problem if you know how many, but now, it is an unknown amount.
Some background info: I am making a library for an API. This library must be easy to use for the people who are going to use it. So I am making the models for the data, the connections and so on, so they just have to fill in the gaps. In C# and Java I did it with objects, but they do not work alike in python, or at least that is what I have found. If I do this: class Item: def __init__(self, id, productId, quantity, pageCount, files, option, metadata): self.id = id self.productId = productId self.quantity = quantity self.pageCount = pageCount self.files = files self.option = option self.metadata = metadata itm = Item(1,None,1,1,'asdf',{'asdf': 3, 'ads': 55},None) print(itm) it prints: <__main__.Item object at 0x02EBF3B0> So that is not usefull to me. There can be an infinite amount of objects of Item, and it needs to be easy accessable, just like for i in items print(i) and it has to show all the parameters of the class Item and not say "ive got an object at this memory address, have a nice day" I hope my question is clear. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list