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Home/ Questions/Q 110399
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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T02:13:15+00:00 2026-05-11T02:13:15+00:00

When I try this code: class MyStuff: def average(a, b, c): # Get the

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When I try this code:

class MyStuff:     def average(a, b, c): # Get the average of three numbers         result = a + b + c         result = result / 3         return result  # Now use the function `average` from the `MyStuff` class print(MyStuff.average(9, 18, 27)) 

I get an error that says:

File "class.py", line 7, in <module>     print(MyStuff.average(9, 18, 27)) TypeError: unbound method average() must be called with MyStuff instance as first argument (got int instance instead) 

What does this mean? Why can’t I call average this way?

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  1. 2026-05-11T02:13:16+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 2:13 am

    You can instantiate the class by declaring a variable and calling the class as if it were a function:

    x = mystuff() print x.average(9,18,27) 

    However, this won’t work with the code you gave us. When you call a class method on a given object (x), it always passes a pointer to the object as the first parameter when it calls the function. So if you run your code right now, you’ll see this error message:

    TypeError: average() takes exactly 3 arguments (4 given) 

    To fix this, you’ll need to modify the definition of the average method to take four parameters. The first parameter is an object reference, and the remaining 3 parameters would be for the 3 numbers.

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