> What you've said here is that "without polymorphism, you can't have
> polymorphism". :) 

Respectfully, no. I refer to the distinction between object based and object 
oriented programming. Wikipedia's entry is consistent with my understanding 
(not to argue by wiki-authority, but the terminology here isn't my personal 
invention).

Your example of "polymorphism in a non OO" language makes my tired head hurt. 
Do you have a clean little example of polymorphism being mocked in a reasonable 
way with pure C? There are many nice object-based C projects floating around, 
but real polymorphism? I think you can't do it without some bizarre 
work-arounds, but I'd be happy to be shown otherwise.


-- 
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Reply via email to