le 11.06.2007 17:24 Diez B. Roggisch a écrit:
> On Monday 11 June 2007 17:06, remi jolin wrote:
>   
>> Hello,
>>
>> I was trying to define a CompoundWidget with TGwidgets and could not get
>> it working because I was defining all the attributes within the __init__
>> method.
>>
>> After reading the widgets.base.py source I discovered that
>> member_widgets was to be defined at the "class level" and not in the
>> __init__ method because it is then used as
>> self.__class__.member_widgets. Why not simply self.member_widgets ???
>>
>> Actually, my goal was to define a widget where some fields would be
>> defined at instanciation time depending on a parameter passed at its
>> creation...
>>     
>
> The reason for all this fancy class-stuff is that then metaclass-magic can 
> make things work a bit more declarative.
>
> Take the WidgetsList for example. Without class-level declaration, one 
> wouldn't get the left-side name:
>
> class MyWidgets(WidgetsList):
>       foo = Whatever()
>
> Usually you can make things work somehow in update_params or the constructor 
> - 
> but I don't know how in your case as I didn't work with CompoundWidgets so 
> far.
>
> But at least you now know why things are the way they are ... :)
>   
That was my first query...

It seems to work by changing display...

Thanks.
> Diez
>
> >
>   

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