Ie, if I have a class MyClass, and I do super(MyClass).init, how can I tell which class's init is actually going to be called?
Some code to illustrate:
class MyClass(OtherClass, ThirdClass):
def __init__(self):
mySuper = super(MyClass)
if mySuper == SomeClass:
# doesn't work - mySuper is a super object (not a normal class object)
pass
if mySuper.__init__ == SomeClass.__init__:
# doesn't work - mySuper.__init__ is a super-method-wrapper object
pass
if mySuper.__thisclass__ == SomeClass:
# doesn't work - __thisclass__ is set to be MyClass, not the "parent" class
pass
Any ideas?
*argsand**kwargsto the super class'__init__, which can extract out the arguments it wants (by naming them as arguments). Why would you want to be doing this? – Darthfett Mar 29 '12 at 22:12