2006/1/5, Jonathan Ellis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> no; the point was, it doesn't matter what name you give the class object;
> that only affects its __name__. I wrote
>
> class Foo: pass
> class Bar = Foo
>
> but I could just as easily have written
>
> Bar = new.classobj('Foo', ...)
> or
> Bar = type('Foo', ...)
>
> (which is the non-deprecated way of creating a class dynamically, btw)
>
So what you mean just like:
>>> import new
>>> A = new.classobj('T', (object,), {})
>>> B = new.classobj('T', (object,), {})
>>> A
<class '__main__.T'>
>>> B
<class '__main__.T'>
Class A and Class B is not the same, only have the same __name__ 'T',
is that right?
So that I could rewrite the assign_class(class_name, table, **kwargs)
to assign_class(table, **kwargs), but all the class may be the same
__name__?
def assign_class(table, **kwargs):
...
klass = new.classobj('TableClass', table, **kwargs)
return klass
--
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