Greetings, my masters. This is somewhat difficult to transfer to my program with 2 classes/objects. All examples I've seen is not for more than one instance of a single object. I use more than one class in my program.
I have a game class and a menu class. When the user chooses "quit" in the menu, I want the menu object to call a method that executes a quit_program() from the game class. Obviously, menu is an object within the game object. class UserInput(CommonBase): def __init__(self, queue, game): self.loop = 1 self.queue = queue self.game = game def main(self): while True: tstr = raw_input("Input string: ") print "Input: ", tstr if tstr == "q": self.quitProgram() def quitProgram(self, game, quit_callback): self.loop = 0 game.loop = 0 quit_callback() class Game(CommonBase): def __init__(self): self.loop = 1 self.queue = Queue.Queue() def startUI(self, tid): ui = UserInput(self.queue, self) ui.main() def stoploop(): self.loop = 0 def main(self): thread.start_new_thread(self.startUI, (1,)) while self.loop: try: data = self.queue.get(block = False) except Queue.Empty: pass else: pass time.sleep(0.1) g = Game() g.main() It is so frustrating not to see the light. I feel that I'm close to understanding the general idea. Allthough I might be wrong on that point. :-) I'm desperate. Thanks in advance. On Dec 29, 2007 7:58 PM, Dave Kuhlman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Here is a trivial example: > > def f1(x): > print 'f1: %s' % x > > def f2(x): > print 'f2: %s' % x > > def use_them(funcs): > for func in funcs: > func('abcd') > > def test(): > funcs = [f1, f2] > use_them(funcs) > > test() > -- Med venlig hilsen/Kind regards Michael B. Arp Sørensen Programmør / BOFH I am /root and if you see me laughing you better have a backup.
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