show/hide this revision's text 2 <pre>-ified the output data

Hello,

In Python, I would like to construct an instance of the Child's class directly from an instance of the Parent class. For example:

A = Parent(x, y, z)
B = Child(A)

This is a hack that I thought might work:

class Parent(object):

    def __init__(self, x, y, z):
        print "INITILIZING PARENT"
        self.x = x
        self.y = y
        self.z = z

class Child(Parent):

    def __new__(cls, *args, **kwds):
        print "NEW'ING CHILD"
        if len(args) == 1 and str(type(args[0])) == "<class '__main__.Parent'>":
            new_args = []
            new_args.extend([args[0].x, args[0].y, args[0].z])
            print "HIJACKING"
            return Child(*new_args)
        print "RETURNING FROM NEW IN CHILD"
        return object.__new__(cls, *args, **kwds)

But when I run

B = Child(A)

I get:

NEW'ING CHILD  
HIJACKING  
NEW'ING CHILD  
RETURNING FROM NEW IN CHILD  
INITILIZING PARENT  
Traceback (most recent call last):  
  File "classes.py", line 52, in <module>  
    B = Child(A)  
TypeError: init() __init__() takes exactly 4 arguments (2 given)

It seems the hack works just as I expected but the compiler throws a TypeError at the end. I was wondering if I could overload TypeError to make it ignore the B = Child(A) idiom but I wasn't sure how to do that. In any case, would you please give me your solutions for inheriting from instances?

Thanks!

show/hide this revision's text 1

Inheriting from instance in Python

Hello,

In Python, I would like to construct an instance of the Child's class directly from an instance of the Parent class. For example:

A = Parent(x, y, z)
B = Child(A)

This is a hack that I thought might work:

class Parent(object):

    def __init__(self, x, y, z):
        print "INITILIZING PARENT"
        self.x = x
        self.y = y
        self.z = z

class Child(Parent):

    def __new__(cls, *args, **kwds):
        print "NEW'ING CHILD"
        if len(args) == 1 and str(type(args[0])) == "<class '__main__.Parent'>":
            new_args = []
            new_args.extend([args[0].x, args[0].y, args[0].z])
            print "HIJACKING"
            return Child(*new_args)
        print "RETURNING FROM NEW IN CHILD"
        return object.__new__(cls, *args, **kwds)

But when I run

B = Child(A)

I get:

NEW'ING CHILD
HIJACKING
NEW'ING CHILD
RETURNING FROM NEW IN CHILD
INITILIZING PARENT
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "classes.py", line 52, in
B = Child(A)
TypeError: init() takes exactly 4 arguments (2 given)

It seems the hack works just as I expected but the compiler throws a TypeError at the end. I was wondering if I could overload TypeError to make it ignore the B = Child(A) idiom but I wasn't sure how to do that. In any case, would you please give me your solutions for inheriting from instances?

Thanks!