grzessnik wrote: > I'm py-appscript newbie and I'm trying to write a script for Adobe > Illustrator. > [...] > class Rectangle(Obiekt): > def __init__(self, kreator, wspolrzedne=[0,0,100,100], > nazwa='figura'): > self.obiekt = kreator.make(new = k.rectangle, > with_properties = {k.name: nazwa, k.bounds: > wspolrzedne}) > self.name = nazwa > > rect1 = Rectangle(mojDokument, [200,200, 100, 100]) > rect2 = Rectangle(mojDokument, [100,200, 200, 100], 'prostokat02') > > both objects reference to the same path item > app(u'/Applications/Adobe Illustrator CS2/Adobe > Illustrator.app').documents[1].layers[1].path_items[1] > app(u'/Applications/Adobe Illustrator CS2/Adobe > Illustrator.app').documents[1].layers[1].path_items[1] > > I suppose, that is because, new objects are always numbered at 1.
Yeah, Illustrator-returned references are pretty fragile, although it's less of an issue if you create an object then apply all of your desired transformations to it before you create the next one. > Can I refere to my created objects via names (self.name)? IIRC, objects aren't named by default; however you could generate your own unique names easily enough. Assign each object a unique name via the 'make' command's 'with properties' parameter, and then use that name in any future references you construct yourself. HTH has -- http://appscript.sourceforge.net http://rb-appscript.rubyforge.org _______________________________________________ Pythonmac-SIG maillist - Pythonmac-SIG@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pythonmac-sig