alex23 wrote:
Jean-Michel Pichavant <jeanmic...@sequans.com> wrote:
alex23 wrote:
To me, the explicit reference to the base class violates DRY. It also
means you need to manually change all such references should the base
class ever change, something that using super() avoids.
I found the correct answer
(http://www.artima.com/weblogs/viewpost.jsp?thread=236275)

I'm not entirely sure how an opinion + explanation of the underlying
mechanics is more or less "correct" than a development principle...
The correctness applies to my answer, not the super mechanism. The super mechanism is correct and properly documented since python 2.6, so anyone is free to use it. I'm just trying to give arguments in favor of using the explicit base class name instead of super.

And in my opinion, explicit names are (slightly) better because there's no underlying explanation required when using the base class name instead of super.

JM
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