In Python, consider I have the following code:
class SuperClass(object):
def __init__(self, x):
self.x = x
class SubClass(SuperClass):
def __init__(self, y):
self.y = y
# how do I initialize the SuperClass __init__ here?
How do I initialize the SuperClass __init__ in the subclass? I am following the Python tutorial and it doesn’t cover that. When I searched on Google, I found more than one way of doing. What is the standard way of handling this?
Python (until version 3) supports "old-style" and new-style classes. New-style classes are derived from
objectand are what you are using, and invoke their base class throughsuper(), e.g.Because python knows about old- and new-style classes, there are different ways to invoke a base method, which is why you’ve found multiple ways of doing so.
For completeness sake, old-style classes call base methods explicitly using the base class, i.e.
But since you shouldn’t be using old-style anymore, I wouldn’t care about this too much.
Python 3 only knows about new-style classes (no matter if you derive from
objector not).