On Feb 14, 8:57 pm, Martin De Kauwe <mdeka...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Feb 14, 8:51 pm, Dave Angel <da...@ieee.org> wrote: > > > > > > > On 01/-10/-28163 02:59 PM, Martin De Kauwe wrote: > > > > <snip> > > > > from other_model import OtherSubModel > > > class Model: > > > > def __init__(self): > > > > # included other external modules (i.e. in other files) > > > om =therSubModel() > > > > def run(self): > > > # call other submodel and pass params > > > om.run(params) > > > What's om supposed to be? You define a local variable in one method, > > and try to use it in a different one ???? > > > Perhaps you meant self.om = > > > > class OtherSubModel: > > > def __init__(self): > > > #some stuff > > > > > > def run(params): > > > You're missing a self here in the formal parameter list. > > > DaveA > > I was trying to write a smaller version of broadly what I think i am > doing, perhaps I am not implementing it correctly. I have one model > which I have coded as a class, there were a few parts which could be > used separately (sub-models). So I decided to make them separate > classes in separate files which I *thought* I could just join up into > one package at run time. This way I could also use these modules > separately. > > So in the dummy example > > the other file is imported > > from other_model import OtherSubModel > > amd om = OtherSubModel was me making an instance of it? And then when > I called the *run* part of this sub-model I was passing it the > parameter file. I am sensing I have this wrong?
oh and yes i did mean self.om.run(params), sorry! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list