[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit : > Hi python experts > > In C++ I can do something like this: > class Base { > public: > void f() { this->f_(); } > private: > virtual void f_() = 0; > }; > > class Derived : public Base { > private: > void f_() { // Do something } > }; > > int main() { > Derived d; > d.f(); > }
<ot> This is eventually the template method pattern, but certainly not the strategy pattern. </ot> > The point of this is that the a number of classes will inherit from > Base and only implement a private member function that only will be > accessed from the base class public 'f' function. > The Base::f() can then perform validation of input/return values, add > logging and things like that. This is usually done in Python with function decorators. But the implementer of the derived class (snip - cf other posts in this thread) > So my questions are: > 1. Is there a "pythonic" way to do what I'm trying to do? > > 2. Should I be doing this at all? Any thoughts? Doing what ? adding logging, validation etc, or using the template method pattern ?-) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list