> This is the most unified reference on __dunder_methods__ ('magic methods') > I've ever seen: > "A Guide to Python's Magic Methods" > https://rszalski.github.io/magicmethods/ > >
I'd not seen that Guide to magic methods before. Thanks! >From perusing it, I was reminded of a topic Trey Hunner discussed in one of his recorded live chats: When defining how your class implements ordering, e.g. using __lt__, __gt__, __eg__ and so on, it's sufficient to define just two of these, then decorate with @total_ordering to have Python fill in the blanks. I tested that out in my OrderingPolys.ipynb (Jupyter Notebook). Great! I'm keeping the demo. http://localhost:8889/notebooks/Documents/SAISOFT/SAISOFT/OrderingPolys.ipynb This Notebook now includes a link back to Rafe's docs. I'll be sure my California students know about this update. We meet again tonight. I use geometry, polyhedrons in particular, as an excuse to introduce OOP from yet another angle (I take a multi-faceted approach). Kirby
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