In the following code ;
>>> class fooo():
def __init__(self):
self.a=[]
>>> fooo().a
[]
>>> fooo.a
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<pyshell#12>", line 1, in <module>
fooo.a
AttributeError: class fooo has no attribute 'a'
i'm a little confuse about the notations fooo().a and fooo.a for accessing the variable "a".Is it that whenever we use fooo().a a object of fooo() class is thrown and it is equivalent to doing as:
>>> m=fooo()
>>> m.a
[]
; while using the notation fooo.a , we are expecting a to be a class/static variable ? Is i'm right or it is something else?
fooo().a
as a notation in itself; it's a combination of two separate things. As in your second examplefooo()
on its own creates an instance. Then.a
accesses its attribute.