As an example, let's say I have the following:
class abcde:
def __init__(self, x, y):
self.x = x
self.y = y
z = abcde(5, 6)
w = abcde(10, 3)
If I wanted to create an instance of abcde
, say zw
, so that the values of its attributes were the product of the corresponding attributes of instances z
and wt
, I would simply do:
zw = abcde(50, 18)
But my actual code has 20 attributes for abcde
and I need a generic way of multiplying these attributes together, because if I have 20 classes which each have 20 attributes, that's 400 figures to write out, then including mixes (which there are a lot) I'll be there forever. I want it to be something like:
zw = abcde(z)*abcde(w)
Please let me know if there's a way I can do this.
x
always come beforey
, come before,z
, etc? If so, perhaps you should have one attribute which stores a tuple... Multiplying two tuples element-wise is easy:map(operator.mul, (5,6), (10,3))
.