I have the following code.py file:
class Shape:
def __init__(self, x, y):
self.x = x
self.y = y
def move(self, delta_x, delta_y):
self.x += delta_x
self.y += delta_y
class Square(Shape):
def __init__(self, side=1, x=0, y=0):
super().__init__(x, y)
self.side = side
class Circle(Shape):
def __init__(self, rad=1, x=0, y=0):
super().__init__(x, y)
self.radius = rad
I’m running the code in the Python interpreter like this:
>>> import code
>>> c = code.Circle(1)
I’m getting this error:
Traceback (most recent call last):<br>
...<br>
File "code.py", line 18, in __init__<br>
super().__init__(x, y)<br>
TypeError: super() takes at least 1 argument (0 given)<br>
I don’t understand why I’m getting this error. I’m specifying a rad value of 1 and I would assume that since I didn’t specify x and y values, Circle should be using the default values of x=0 and y=0 and passing them to Shape via the super() function. What am I missing?
BTW, I’m using Python 2.7.1.
Thanks.
superrequires an argument and this is exactly what the error message is saying. In your case you need to usesuper(Circle, self)andsuper(Square, self).For the gory details you can see this SO question or you can just check the official documentation.
Note that unless you want to do funny things the code can be simplified in
in both cases. Until you understand
superand why it can be useful I would suggest to simply stay away from it. You can live an happy life as a productive Python programmer without touching that.