> I don't know if your're actually calling the classes '1' and '2', but > that's a really bad idea! > > >>class 2: >> def ins(self) >> d.entry.insert(variable) > > > This is probably where you're getting the NameError. d is not defined, > so calling d.entry will generate an error. > > Reidar >
What is d = 1() in my example then? And how do I solve this problem? ч -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list