The source code below will raise the exception on the last line. Why the exception is raised if they are two different objects?
class BaseClass(object):
accounts = dict()
def AddAccount(self, account_id, account_var):
if account_id in self.accounts.keys():
raise Exception('Account already exists')
self.accounts.update({account_id: account_var})
class Class1(BaseClass):
pass
class Class2(BaseClass):
pass
ACCOUNT_ID = '123'
c1 = Class1()
c2 = Class2()
c1.AddAccount(ACCOUNT_ID, 'abc')
c2.AddAccount(ACCOUNT_ID, 'abc')
I've tried call the constructor inside each class, but that don't solve the problem. I did like this inside each class:
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
It looks like the BaseClass
is always a static object. When I change in one object, it will change in the other one.