king kikapu wrote: > On Aug 10, 1:33 pm, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> On Fri, 10 Aug 2007 03:21:29 -0700, king kikapu wrote: >>> Hi, >>> i read in a book the following code snippet that is dealing with >>> properties: >>> class ProtectAndHideX(object): >>> def __init__(self, x): >>> assert isinstance(x, int), '"x" must be an integer!"' >>> self.__x = ~x >>> def get_x(self): >>> return ~self.__x >>> x = property(get_x) >>> Can anyone please help me understand what the symbol "~" does here ?? >> This has nothing to do with properties. For integer objects ``~`` is the >> bitwise negation or invertion operator. >> >> Ciao, >> Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch > > Xmmm...ok then but what is actually doing there ?? I removed it and > things seems to work the same way... > Observe the name of the class. I believe the integer value is inverted merely as a demonstration that the value can be "obscured" somehow - in a more complex example the author might have insisted in string values, the encrypted them. It's not essential to the example, it merely shows that the value retrieved from the property can be computed from underlying attributes.
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