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Home/ Questions/Q 8703299
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 13, 20262026-06-13T02:50:41+00:00 2026-06-13T02:50:41+00:00

I have the following classes in Python: class String: def clean_string(self, corpus): f =

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I have the following classes in Python:

class String:    
    def clean_string(self, corpus):
        f = open(corpus, 'r')
        raw = f.read().lower()
        f.close()
        raw1 = re.sub(omissis, '', raw) 
        self.string = raw1

    def print_string(self):
        return self.string

class Set:
    def letters_set(self, string):
        self.let_set = set(re.findall(omissis, string))

class Dict:
    def __init__(self, dictionary={}):
        self.dictionary = {} 
        self.string = String()
        self.let_set = Set() 

    def generate_possible_triplets(self, let_set):
        triplet = [(ch1, ch2, ch3) for ch1 in let_set
                                   for ch2 in let_set
                                   for ch3 in let_set]
        [...]

I have a problem with objects as function arguments. Suppose I want to create an instance of the class Set, one of class String and call the method .letters_set(String.string).

What do I have to put as argument inside the parenthesis? the name of the object of class string I will create? a variable referenced to this object? (same applies for the method .generate_possible_triplets in Dict. What form should let_set take?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-13T02:50:42+00:00Added an answer on June 13, 2026 at 2:50 am

    You would probably just want to make your methods accept instances of your custom classes…

    class String:
        ...
    
    class Set:
        def letters_set(self, stringObj):
            # stringObj is a String instance
            self.let_set = set(re.findall(omissis, stringObj.string))
    
    class Dict:
        ...
    
        def generate_possible_triplets(self, setObj):
            # setObj is a Set instance
            triplet = [(ch1, ch2, ch3) for ch1 in setObj.let_set
                                       for ch2 in setObj.let_set
                                       for ch3 in setObj.let_set]
    
    
    aString = String()
    aSet = Set()
    aDict = Dict()
    
    aSet.letters_set(aString)
    aDict.generate_possible_triplets(aSet)
    

    The methods can then expect to operate on those classes appropriately to access the attributes. This example is not specifically checking the capabilities of the objects being passed in, but they would obviously raise an exception when you try to access an improper object type that does not have a .string or .let_set attribute.

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