Ok. I am trying to extend a data structure class by making a subclass. The use case is that the program will already have an instance of the parent class and pass that to the constructor of the subclass. In other words, I have an instance of a parent class, A, and I want to feed it into an extended class constructor to get an instance of the extended class, B.
class child(Parent):
def __init__ (self, dataInstance=None):
super(child, self).__init__(dataInstance)
child.someparentmethod() # YES!
So if the Parent class could take an instance of itself in its constructor this would work (actually I'm dealing with multiple classes where some do and some do not). The hack-y thing I want to avoid is just passing the parent data structure as a property of another class:
class notChild():
def __init__ (self, dataInstance=None):
self.data = dataInstance
notChild.data.someparentmethod() # yuck.
I'm relatively new to OOP in python and I hope I'm overlooking something obvious. Thanks!