So I've recently dived into OOP, and so far everything is going smooth. Whilst I have no issues per se, there's an amazing feature which I hope exists, though I cannot find any documentation on said feature.
When assigning attributes to objects, I often find that I have to change attribues that are dependent upon others, say, light and darkness. Here's an example:
class shade:
def __init__(self, light):
self.light=light
self.darkness=100-light
def __str__(self):
return (str(self.light) + ',' + str(self.darkness))
>>> shade1=shade(30,70)
>>> shade1.light
30
>>> shade1.darkness
70
Now, while that is cool and all, what I would like is the same process to occur, but within the same object if a change in one attribute occurs. If I reset the property of light (oh yeah), I want darkness to incr/decr accordingly. I can do this with a function if it works to change the property of light, returning the new value of light/darkness, but I'd like a way to do this if i change the property of light simply by re-assigning it's value, w/out the use of functions, Like this:
>>> shade1.light=50
>>> shade1.light
50
>>> shade1.darkness
50
Also, as am new to OOP, if anyone knows some good tutorials, that would also be a massive help.
Thanks in advance.
Define
darkness
as a propertyProperties outwardly appear as attributes, but internally act as function calls. When you say
s.darkness
it will call the function you've provided for its property. This allows you to only maintain one variable internally.If you want to be able to modify it by assigning to darkness, add a
setter
for the propertyThereby actually modifying light. If you've never seen properties before, I'd recommend throwing in some
print()
s to the bodies of the functions so you can see when they are called.