> What I really can't stand are the > pointy-haired comment blocks at the > beginnings of C/C++ functions that do > things like tell you the name and return > type of the function and list the names > and types of the parameters. Gee, thanks. > I never could have figured that out from > looking at the source code itself.
Coming from C++/Java camp i can't help noticing that in most cases, when i'm using a class written by somebody else, i don't want to see his/her code. I only want to know WHAT the function does (is intended to be doing, at least). I don't want to look at the source code (in some cases i can't even see the code because it's compiled). I only care that when i execute SomeType obj = SomeType(); obj.aggregate(); the object gets aggregated. How it's done will be up to the author. I'm just a user of the product. Now, i'm getting the signal that it's done in a different way in Python. Please elaborate. I'm very new to snakeology. -- Regards Konrad Viltersten -------------------------------- sleep - a substitute for coffee for the poor ambition - lack of sense to be lazy -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list