Add a default __prepare__() method to 'type', so it can be called

using super().  (See recent conversation on python-3000 with Talin
and Phillip Eby about PEP 3115 chaining rules.)
This commit is contained in:
Guido van Rossum 2007-08-02 16:48:17 +00:00
parent a9efc8e268
commit 4737482fad
2 changed files with 33 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -207,6 +207,29 @@ And again, with a __prepare__ attribute.
kw: [('other', 'booh')]
>>>
The default metaclass must define a __prepare__() method.
>>> type.__prepare__()
{}
>>>
Make sure it works with subclassing.
>>> class M(type):
... @classmethod
... def __prepare__(cls, *args, **kwds):
... d = super().__prepare__(*args, **kwds)
... d["hello"] = 42
... return d
...
>>> class C(metaclass=M):
... print(hello)
...
42
>>> print(C.hello)
42
>>>
"""
__test__ = {'doctests' : doctests}