Good Day!

I am stuck... hopefully a few fresh pairs of eyes will spot what I am missing.

I have a metaclass, Traits, and two different testing files, test_traits.py and tests.py. test_traits works fine, tests generates the following error:

C:\Python31\Lib\site-packages\traits\tests>\python31\python tests.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "tests.py", line 4, in <module>
    class TraitConflict(meta=Traits, traits=(BoxPrint, BigBoxPrint)):
TypeError: type() takes 1 or 3 arguments


Working code from test_traits.py:
class DerivedClass(metaclass=Traits, traits=(TBundle1, TBundle2)):
    def repeat(yo, text, count):
        print('whatever...')
    def whatsit(yo, arg1):
        print("calling baseclass's whatsit...")
        print(super().whatsit(arg1))

Failing code from tests.py:
class TraitConflict(meta=Traits, traits=(BoxPrint, BigBoxPrint)):
    def useless(yo):
        print("this class won't compile")


Any clues or pointers *greatly* appreciated!

~Ethan~
--
Traits is homegrown, the idea based on Michele Simionato's Simple Traits experiment. It was intrigueing, and I wanted to see if I could implement something similar in Python 3. Any ideas now on what to do with it will also be greatly appreciated! :)
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