Ary Borenszweig:
> It bothers me. Maybe it doesn't bother anyone else in this newsgroup 
> because they already fell in that trap and they know the solution or the 
> workarounds.

I too have fallen in this little trap, but after the first time you learn to 
add a "." before toString. I use str()/repr() functions from my dlibs to avoid 
name clashes with toString() (see below), so I think that it may be better for 
the method and the global function to have different names.

Python avoids such problem because the function and the method have different 
names: the global built-in functions are named str() and repr() and the methods 
are __str__() and __repr__(). (each function calls the relative method. If 
__str__ is absent, __repr__ is called as fallback). str() gives a 
human-readable textual representation of something, and repr() gives a string 
representation that whenever possible is the text you have to write to define 
that thing in the code, so generally eval(repr(x)) == x.

Bye,
bearophile

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