Is it possible to put all of those objects in their own module, having the function you describe as a module defined function? For example pseudo code....


### Lib.py ### def function(x): return stuff

class C1:
   def __init__(self):
       init stuff
   def funct(self,arg):
       return function(arg)

class C2:
   def __init__(self):
       init stuff for this class
   def clone(self,arg):
       return function(arg)

######################

Usage of this module could be simple enough.

import Lib

a = Lib.C1()
a.funct("a")

b = Lib.C2()
b.clone("a")


The methods defined funct and clone do the same things.

HTH,
Jacob

Hello

There are several different objects. However, they all share the same
function.

Since they are not the same or similar, it's not logical to use a
common superclass.

So I'm asking, what's a good way to allow those objects to share that
function?

The best solution I've found so far is to put that function in a
module, and have all objects import and use it. But I doubt that's a
good use-case for modules; writing and importing a module that contains
just a single function seems like an abuse.

Thanks,
Xif

_______________________________________________
Tutor maillist  -  Tutor@python.org
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor



_______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor

Reply via email to