> You are right, but it is even worse than you think. I do not have a tutorial so I have no examples to understand.
The tutorial that Terry was referring to was the one on docs.python.org, here's a couple of links for the sections he was referring to: Full section on classes: https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/classes.html Section on instantiating objects from classes: https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/classes.html#class-objects On Thu, Aug 22, 2019 at 4:40 PM Paul St George <em...@paulstgeorge.com> wrote: > On 22/08/2019 20:02, Terry Reedy wrote: > > On 8/22/2019 3:34 AM, Paul St George wrote: > >> I have the Python API for the Map Value Node here: > >> < > https://docs.blender.org/api/current/bpy.types.CompositorNodeMapValue.html>. > > >> > >> > >> All well and good. Now I just want to write a simple line of code such > >> as: > >> > >> import bpy > >> > >> ... > >> > >> >>>print(bpy.types.CompositorNodeMapValue.max[0]) > >> > >> If this works, I will do something similar for max, min, offset and > >> then size. > > > > From this and your other responses, you seem to not understand some of > > the concepts explained in the tutorial, in particular class and class > > instance. Perhaps you should reread the appropriate section(s), and if > > you don't understand any of the examples, ask about them here. We are > > familiar with those, but not with CompositorNodeMapValue. > > > > > Terry, > You are right, but it is even worse than you think. I do not have a > tutorial so I have no examples to understand. > > Reading Cameron et al, I have broken the problem down into: > do something (probably using the word self) that _gives_ me an instance > of CompositorNodeMapValue. > > Then when I done that, > look at some of the attributes (.max, .min, .offset, .size) of the > instance. > > Paul > > -- > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list > -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list