I am interested in using the python list object, but with slightly altered functionality. In particular, I would like the list to be 1-indexed instead of 0-indexed. E.g.:
>> mylist = MyList()
>> mylist.extend([1,2,3,4,5])
>> print mylist[1]
output should be: 1
But when I changed the __getitem__() and __setitem__() methods to do this, I was getting a RuntimeError: maximum recursion depth exceeded error. I tinkered around with these methods a lot but this is basically what I had in there:
class MyList(list):
def __getitem__(self, key):
return self[key-1]
def __setitem__(self, key, item):
self[key-1] = item
I guess the problem is that self[key-1] is itself calling the same method it’s defining. If so, how do I make it use the list() method instead of the MyList() method? I tried using super[key-1] instead of self[key-1] but that resulted in the complaint TypeError: 'type' object is unsubscriptable
Any ideas? Also if you could point me at a good tutorial for this that’d be great!
Thanks!
Use the
super()function to call the method of the base class, or invoke the method directly:or
However, this will not change the behavior of other list methods. For example, index remains unchanged, which can lead to unexpected results: