I don't know of a way for you to get the .Net operators to work from Python, but I certainly wouldn't want to try to read code that used + to do an operation that you seem to think should be named Or.
Why not add an Or method (or any name you want) to the BDDNode class, one that takes a BDDNode parameter, and write it so that others can figure out that code is calling a method of the BDDNode class? BDDNode A = new BDDNode(whatever); BDDNode B = new BDDNode(whatever); A = A.Or(B) gives more of an indication of what's happening than does A+B I'd have a bit of sympathy if you were trying to use + to call an operator that actually did some form of addition! BTW, does BDDOr create a new BDDNode object and return it, or does it modify "this" and then return a reference to it? Those are very different ways of doing things... At 05:20 PM 5/2/2007, Justin Frost wrote >Hi Folks, >Is there a way to write a C# class that has operators that work in Python? >Currently, if I have a class with a method like the following: > >public static BDDNode operator +(BDDNode A, BDDNode B) > { > return A.BDDOr(B); > } > >and try to add two BDDNode Objects in Python ith the "+" operator, I get the >following: > >TypeError: unsupported operand type(s) for +: 'BDDNode' and 'BDDNode' > >Any way around this? > >Thanks, >-Justin J. Merrill / Analytical Software Corp _________________________________________________ Python.NET mailing list - PythonDotNet@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pythondotnet