May-06-2020, 05:09 AM
Hello,
The code below does exactly what I want. Basically the goal is to get an object, and then from that object, get some properties.
This is better explained with this example:
thanks
R
The code below does exactly what I want. Basically the goal is to get an object, and then from that object, get some properties.
This is better explained with this example:
class Binary(object): def __init__(self, name): self._name = name def name(self): return self._name @property def asBinary(self): res = ''.join(format(i, 'b') for i in bytearray(self._name, encoding='utf-8')) return res def __repr__(self): return self.name() class Person(object): def __init__(self, name): self._name = name def getName(self): binary = Binary(self._name) return binary person = Person("Toby") name = person.getName() # Result: Toby name.asBinary # Result: 1010100110111111000101111001As I said, this works exactly as I want. I didn't want to have something like
person = Person("Toby") person.getName() person.getNameAsBinary # <-- Don't want that. I want this --> name.asBinaryMy question is just if there is a cleaner way to obtain the same result I got, or it is correct they way I did it.
thanks
R