On 26Mar2023 22:36, Jen Kris <jenk...@tutanota.com> wrote:
At the final line it calls "satisfy" in the Constraint class, and that line calls choose_method in the BinaryConstraint class.  Just as Peter Holzer said, it requires a call to "satisfy." 

My only remaining question is, did it select the choose_method in the BinaryConstraint class instead of the choose_method in the UrnaryConstraint class because of "super(BinaryConstraint, self).__init__(strength)" in step 2 above? 

Basicly, no.

You've omitting the "class" lines of the class definitions, and they define the class inheritance, _not "__init__". The "__init__" method just initialises the state of the new objects (which has already been created). The:

    super(BinaryConstraint,_ self).__init__(strength)

line simply calls the appropriate superclass "__init__" with the "strength" parameter to do that aspect of the initialisation.

You haven't cited the line which calls the "choose_method" method, but I'm imagining it calls "choose_method" like this:

    self.choose_method(...)

That searchs for the "choose_method" method based on the method resolution order of the object "self". So if "self" was an instance of "EqualityConstraint", and I'm guessing abut its class definition, assuming this:

    class EqualityConstraint(BinaryConstraint):

Then a call to "self.choose_method" would look for a "choose_method" method first in the EqualityConstraint class and then via the BinaryConstraint class. I'm also assuming UrnaryConstraint is not in that class ancestry i.e. not an ancestor of BinaryConstraint, for example.

The first method found is used.

In practice, when you define a class like:

    class EqualityConstraint(BinaryConstraint):

the complete class ancestry (the addition classes from which BinaryConstraint inherits) gets flatterned into a "method resultion order" list of classes to inspect in order, and that is stored as the ".__mro__" field on the new class (EqualityConstraint). You can look at it directly as "EqualityConstraint.__mro__".

So looking up:

    self.choose_method()

looks for a "choose_method" method on the classes in "type(self).__mro__".

Cheers,
Cameron Simpson <c...@cskk.id.au>
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