On May 2, 7:54 am, Greg Ewing <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I can only speak from my own experience, which is that > whenever I've had a problem involving multiple inheritance, > super() didn't solve it. What did solve it was either > refactoring so that the classes being mixed were more > independent, or finding another solution that didn't > require multiple inheritance. > > Usually the new solution turned out to be better in > other ways as well, so I've come to regard multiple > inheritance issues as a code smell suggesting that > I need to rethink something.
This is my experience as well. I have not found a real life problem yet that I could not solve with single inheritance + composition/delegation in a better and more maintainable way than using multiple inheritance. Also, I have come to believe that cooperative methods are a wart (it is too difficult to reason about them, they are fragile, and overall I see them as an unneeded complication in everyday coding). But we are stuck with multiple inheritance now and there is already a lot of code out there using it, so in the present situation we have to cope with it and to make it more usable, so I welcome the new super. I think that it should be made a keyword tough (it is too magic now not to be one). Michele Simionato _______________________________________________ Python-Dev mailing list Python-Dev@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com