I think he meant ob.__of__(self) which wraps ob into the context of self. Useful for returning unwrapped Python objects while you're in Python. On Fri, 18 Aug 2000, Kapil Thangavelu wrote:
Dieter Maurer wrote:
Daniel Rusch writes:
So far so good,
Next hurdle, at least the problems have been cut down to hurdles from walls.
I have a folderish product say myFolder, in the manage_addMyFolder function I want to create an object of my product B. so I do this:
def manage_addmyFolder(self, id, title='', REQUEST=None): """Add a new myFolder object with id *id*. """ ob=myFolder() ob.id=id ob.title=title self._setObject(id, ob) try: user=REQUEST['AUTHENTICATED_USER'] except: user=None ob.manage_addB(id='index_html', title='') <-- if I change this to Try: (ob __of__ self).manage_addB(....)
whats is ob__of__self ???
acquisition at its best?
attribute access to get a reference to the ob attr of self?
kapil
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