On 3/3/08, Pete Shinners <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I always like using a module as a container for all my singletons and > shared globals. Python modules already work this way, making it a > natural fit. > > Python can build a class that is a "true" singleton. It involves > overriding the __new__ operator. But usually it's easier to write a > "GetMySingleton()" type of function that builds and remembers the class > of your type.
i'm not sure if i got this right: you - use an "ordinary" class - make an instance in a module and - excess this instance only via the module? maybe you can provide an example?