On Mon, Mar 10, 2003 at 03:33:18PM -0600, Michael R. Schwab wrote:
I've noted two different methods for declaring security in a class. (snip) The second method, which I believe to be the most recent,
that's correct.
The second method seems to be the newest and most logical approach. The being exception that the default security access to 'deny' does not permit me to access attributes from my class that are basic Python types such as strings (e.g. meta_type from a DTML Method). I could declare the default security access to 'allow', but that seems inherently dangerous from a security standpoint.
I think what you're looking for is __allow_access_to_unprotected_subobjects__ = 1 or, just make declarations on specific attributes: security.declarePublic('meta_type') self.meta_type = "blah" -- Paul Winkler http://www.slinkp.com