I am going to implement below C# piece of code in Python. As a matter of fact, when I instantiate an object from class B, I am prone to get some flexibility to choose between the parent-version or child version of the overrided method, just like below:
class A
{
public virtual void show()
{
Console.WriteLine("Print A");
}
}
class B : A
{
public override void show()
{
Console.WriteLine("Print B");
}
}
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
A a;
a = new A();
a.show();
a = new B();
a.show();
Console.ReadKey();
}
}
Where the output is:
Print A
Print B
But I have no clear idea to the same with super keyword in python. I have written below code:
class A(object):
def f(self):
print("A.f()")
class B(A):
def f(self):
print("B.f()")
return super().f()
b = B()
b.f()
where the output is:
B.f()
A.f()
which is not my desired output; in the latter case, i.e. Python one, the two strings are generated just by one method call.
Would you please help me to change the python code so that the desired output is acquired?