Greetings, my master.
I think you need to strip back and simplify, it looks like
you may have been reading too many different resources
and incorporated some ideas without really understanding
what they do and why.
I'm humbled by your insight. This is absolutely true.
I did some research,
Michael Bernhard Arp Sørensen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote
I did some research, reading and test last night and I finally got
it
working.
Sorry, but you didn't! However you are very nearly there...
class UserInput:
def __init__(self):
pass
def test_callback(self, this_callback):
Hi again.
On Jan 2, 2008 2:25 PM, Alan Gauld [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I did some research, reading and test last night and I finally got
it
working.
Sorry, but you didn't! However you are very nearly there...
Darn. :-(
I've read what to wrote about the *parentheses*. I see why I was
Michael Bernhard Arp Sørensen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote
I've read what to wrote about the *parentheses*. I see why I was
wrong in my
premature assumption. but I fail to understand why it did work.
I suspect that if you look closely you'll find that the testing
print statement
came after the
Hi.
On Jan 2, 2008 6:36 PM, Alan Gauld [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can you modify the program *without modifying the classes* to use an
ordinary function as the callback? Say this goodbye function:
def goodbye():
print goodbye world
This should not require more than 5 lines of new code
Yes, exactly like that.
Well done, you are now callback aware :-)
Alan G.
- Original Message
From: Michael Bernhard Arp Sørensen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Alan Gauld [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: tutor@python.org
Sent: Wednesday, 2 January, 2008 8:19:23 PM
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Learning about
Greetings, my masters.
This is somewhat difficult to transfer to my program with 2 classes/objects.
All examples I've seen is not for more than one instance of a single object.
I use more than one class in my program.
I have a game class and a menu class. When the user chooses quit in the
menu,
Michael Bernhard Arp Sørensen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote
I have a game class and a menu class. When the user chooses
quit in the menu, I want the menu object to call a method that
executes a quit_program() from the game class.
self.game.quit_program()
should do it.
Except in your code bekow
Michael Bernhard Arp Sørensen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote
Greetings, my master.
Nah, there are no masters on the tutor list, we are all learning
together,
just at different stages. If you really want the masters go to
comp.lang.python! :-)
I'm writing a game based on curses.
OK, That gives us
On Sun, Dec 30, 2007 at 09:17:42AM -, Alan Gauld wrote:
Yes, the Python tutor list is one of the best features of Python.
This expresses exactly the way I feel about python. Everytime I have
to work in another language, I keep asking myself: but where is the
tutor mailing list for this
Hi there.
I want to learn about callbacks because we use it at work in our software.
I there a short hello world-like version of a callback example?
--
Med venlig hilsen/Kind regards
Michael B. Arp Sørensen
Programmør / BOFH
I am /root and if you see me laughing you better have a backup.
Greetings, my master.
I'm writing a game based on curses.
I have my own screen object and several child objects to handle sub windows
with e.g. menues, board/map/views and log outputs. All user input is done
with screen.getch and later sent to the dynamic menu for selecting menu
points.
My
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