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Groups > comp.lang.python > #42802 > unrolled thread
| Started by | Tom P <werotizy@freent.dd> |
|---|---|
| First post | 2013-04-05 13:02 +0200 |
| Last post | 2013-04-06 23:38 +0200 |
| Articles | 10 — 3 participants |
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HTTPserver: how to access variables of a higher class? Tom P <werotizy@freent.dd> - 2013-04-05 13:02 +0200
Re: HTTPserver: how to access variables of a higher class? Dave Angel <davea@davea.name> - 2013-04-05 07:54 -0400
Re: HTTPserver: how to access variables of a higher class? Tom P <werotizy@freent.dd> - 2013-04-05 15:26 +0200
Re: HTTPserver: how to access variables of a higher class? Tom P <werotizy@freent.dd> - 2013-04-05 23:41 +0200
Re: HTTPserver: how to access variables of a higher class? Dave Angel <davea@davea.name> - 2013-04-05 23:19 -0400
Re: HTTPserver: how to access variables of a higher class? Dylan Evans <dylan@dje.me> - 2013-04-05 22:27 +1000
Re: HTTPserver: how to access variables of a higher class? Tom P <werotizy@freent.dd> - 2013-04-05 15:21 +0200
Re: HTTPserver: how to access variables of a higher class? Tom P <werotizy@freent.dd> - 2013-04-06 17:05 +0200
Re: HTTPserver: how to access variables of a higher class? Dylan Evans <dylan@dje.me> - 2013-04-07 11:51 +1000
Re: The SOLUTION HTTPserver: how to access variables of a higher class Tom P <werotizy@freent.dd> - 2013-04-06 23:38 +0200
| From | Tom P <werotizy@freent.dd> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-04-05 13:02 +0200 |
| Subject | HTTPserver: how to access variables of a higher class? |
| Message-ID | <as7paeFs5e9U1@mid.individual.net> |
First, here's a sample test program:
<code>
import sys
from BaseHTTPServer import HTTPServer, BaseHTTPRequestHandler
class MyRequestHandler(BaseHTTPRequestHandler, object):
def do_GET(self):
top_self = super(MyRequestHandler, self) # try to access
MyWebServer instance
self.send_response(200)
self.send_header('Content-type', 'text/html')
self.end_headers()
self.wfile.write("thanks for trying, but I'd like to get at
self.foo and self.bar")
return
class MyWebServer(object):
def __init__(self):
self.foo = "foo" # these are what I want to access from inside
do_GET
self.bar = "bar"
self.httpd = HTTPServer(('127.0.0.1', 8000), MyRequestHandler)
sa = self.httpd.socket.getsockname()
print "Serving HTTP on", sa[0], "port", sa[1], "..."
def runIt(self):
self.httpd.serve_forever()
server = MyWebServer()
server.runIt()
</code>
I want to access the foo and bar variables from do_GET, but I can't
figure out how. I suppose this is something to do with new-style vs.
old-style classes, but I lost for a solution.
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| From | Dave Angel <davea@davea.name> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-04-05 07:54 -0400 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.132.1365162863.3114.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #42802 |
On 04/05/2013 07:02 AM, Tom P wrote:
> First, here's a sample test program:
> <code>
> import sys
> from BaseHTTPServer import HTTPServer, BaseHTTPRequestHandler
>
> class MyRequestHandler(BaseHTTPRequestHandler, object):
> def do_GET(self):
> top_self = super(MyRequestHandler, self) # try to access
> MyWebServer instance
> self.send_response(200)
> self.send_header('Content-type', 'text/html')
> self.end_headers()
> self.wfile.write("thanks for trying, but I'd like to get at
> self.foo and self.bar")
> return
>
> class MyWebServer(object):
> def __init__(self):
> self.foo = "foo" # these are what I want to access from inside
> do_GET
> self.bar = "bar"
> self.httpd = HTTPServer(('127.0.0.1', 8000), MyRequestHandler)
> sa = self.httpd.socket.getsockname()
> print "Serving HTTP on", sa[0], "port", sa[1], "..."
>
> def runIt(self):
> self.httpd.serve_forever()
>
> server = MyWebServer()
> server.runIt()
>
> </code>
>
> I want to access the foo and bar variables from do_GET, but I can't
> figure out how. I suppose this is something to do with new-style vs.
> old-style classes, but I lost for a solution.
It'd have been good to tell us that this was on Python 2.7
Is MyWebServer class intended to have exactly one instance? If so, you
could save the instance as a class attribute, and trivially access it
from outside the class.
If it might have more than one instance, then we'd need to know more
about the class BaseHTTPServer.HTTPServer, From a quick glance at the
docs, it looks like you get an attribute called server. So inside the
do_GET() method, you should be able to access self.server.foo and
self.server.bar
See http://docs.python.org/2/library/basehttpserver.html
--
DaveA
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| From | Tom P <werotizy@freent.dd> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-04-05 15:26 +0200 |
| Message-ID | <as81nsFu3flU1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #42806 |
On 04/05/2013 01:54 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
> On 04/05/2013 07:02 AM, Tom P wrote:
>> First, here's a sample test program:
>> <code>
>> import sys
>> from BaseHTTPServer import HTTPServer, BaseHTTPRequestHandler
>>
>> class MyRequestHandler(BaseHTTPRequestHandler, object):
>> def do_GET(self):
>> top_self = super(MyRequestHandler, self) # try to access
>> MyWebServer instance
>> self.send_response(200)
>> self.send_header('Content-type', 'text/html')
>> self.end_headers()
>> self.wfile.write("thanks for trying, but I'd like to get at
>> self.foo and self.bar")
>> return
>>
>> class MyWebServer(object):
>> def __init__(self):
>> self.foo = "foo" # these are what I want to access from inside
>> do_GET
>> self.bar = "bar"
>> self.httpd = HTTPServer(('127.0.0.1', 8000), MyRequestHandler)
>> sa = self.httpd.socket.getsockname()
>> print "Serving HTTP on", sa[0], "port", sa[1], "..."
>>
>> def runIt(self):
>> self.httpd.serve_forever()
>>
>> server = MyWebServer()
>> server.runIt()
>>
>> </code>
>>
>> I want to access the foo and bar variables from do_GET, but I can't
>> figure out how. I suppose this is something to do with new-style vs.
>> old-style classes, but I lost for a solution.
>
> It'd have been good to tell us that this was on Python 2.7
>
Yes, sorry for the omission.
> Is MyWebServer class intended to have exactly one instance?
Yes, but I was trying to keep it general.
If so, you
> could save the instance as a class attribute, and trivially access it
> from outside the class.
>
> If it might have more than one instance, then we'd need to know more
> about the class BaseHTTPServer.HTTPServer, From a quick glance at the
> docs, it looks like you get an attribute called server. So inside the
> do_GET() method, you should be able to access self.server.foo and
> self.server.bar
ok, let me test that. Do I assume correctly from what you write that
the super() is not needed?
In reality there is just one instance of MyWebServer, but I was
looking for a general solution.
>
> See http://docs.python.org/2/library/basehttpserver.html
>
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| From | Tom P <werotizy@freent.dd> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-04-05 23:41 +0200 |
| Message-ID | <as8uncF65m3U1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #42806 |
On 04/05/2013 01:54 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
> On 04/05/2013 07:02 AM, Tom P wrote:
>> First, here's a sample test program:
>> <code>
>> import sys
>> from BaseHTTPServer import HTTPServer, BaseHTTPRequestHandler
>>
>> class MyRequestHandler(BaseHTTPRequestHandler, object):
>> def do_GET(self):
>> top_self = super(MyRequestHandler, self) # try to access
>> MyWebServer instance
>> self.send_response(200)
>> self.send_header('Content-type', 'text/html')
>> self.end_headers()
>> self.wfile.write("thanks for trying, but I'd like to get at
>> self.foo and self.bar")
>> return
>>
>> class MyWebServer(object):
>> def __init__(self):
>> self.foo = "foo" # these are what I want to access from inside
>> do_GET
>> self.bar = "bar"
>> self.httpd = HTTPServer(('127.0.0.1', 8000), MyRequestHandler)
>> sa = self.httpd.socket.getsockname()
>> print "Serving HTTP on", sa[0], "port", sa[1], "..."
>>
>> def runIt(self):
>> self.httpd.serve_forever()
>>
>> server = MyWebServer()
>> server.runIt()
>>
>> </code>
>>
>> I want to access the foo and bar variables from do_GET, but I can't
>> figure out how. I suppose this is something to do with new-style vs.
>> old-style classes, but I lost for a solution.
>
> It'd have been good to tell us that this was on Python 2.7
>
> Is MyWebServer class intended to have exactly one instance? If so, you
> could save the instance as a class attribute, and trivially access it
> from outside the class.
>
> If it might have more than one instance, then we'd need to know more
> about the class BaseHTTPServer.HTTPServer, From a quick glance at the
> docs, it looks like you get an attribute called server. So inside the
> do_GET() method, you should be able to access self.server.foo and
> self.server.bar
>
> See http://docs.python.org/2/library/basehttpserver.html
>
That doesn't work. Maybe you mean something that I'm missing?
Setting a breakpoint in do_GET:
Pdb) b 7
Breakpoint 1 at /home/tom/Desktop/tidy/Python/webserver/simpleWebserver.py:7
(Pdb) c
Serving HTTP on 127.0.0.1 port 8000 ...
> /home/tom/Desktop/tidy/Python/webserver/simpleWebserver.py(7)do_GET()
-> self.send_response(200)
(Pdb) self
<__main__.MyRequestHandler instance at 0x7ff20dde3bd8>
(Pdb) self.server
<BaseHTTPServer.HTTPServer instance at 0x7ff20dde3830>
(Pdb) dir(self.server)
['RequestHandlerClass', '_BaseServer__is_shut_down',
'_BaseServer__shutdown_request', '__doc__', '__init__', '__module__',
'_handle_request_noblock', 'address_family', 'allow_reuse_address',
'close_request', 'fileno', 'finish_request', 'get_request',
'handle_error', 'handle_request', 'handle_timeout', 'process_request',
'request_queue_size', 'serve_forever', 'server_activate',
'server_address', 'server_bind', 'server_close', 'server_name',
'server_port', 'shutdown', 'shutdown_request', 'socket', 'socket_type',
'timeout', 'verify_request']
(Pdb) self.server.foo
*** AttributeError: HTTPServer instance has no attribute 'foo'
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| From | Dave Angel <davea@davea.name> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-04-05 23:19 -0400 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.181.1365218398.3114.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #42851 |
On 04/05/2013 05:41 PM, Tom P wrote:
> On 04/05/2013 01:54 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
>> On 04/05/2013 07:02 AM, Tom P wrote:
>>> First, here's a sample test program:
>>> <code>
>>> import sys
>>> from BaseHTTPServer import HTTPServer, BaseHTTPRequestHandler
>>>
>>> class MyRequestHandler(BaseHTTPRequestHandler, object):
>>> def do_GET(self):
>>> top_self = super(MyRequestHandler, self) # try to access
>>> MyWebServer instance
>>> self.send_response(200)
>>> self.send_header('Content-type', 'text/html')
>>> self.end_headers()
>>> self.wfile.write("thanks for trying, but I'd like to get at
>>> self.foo and self.bar")
>>> return
>>>
>>> class MyWebServer(object):
>>> def __init__(self):
>>> self.foo = "foo" # these are what I want to access from inside
>>> do_GET
>>> self.bar = "bar"
>>> self.httpd = HTTPServer(('127.0.0.1', 8000), MyRequestHandler)
>>> sa = self.httpd.socket.getsockname()
>>> print "Serving HTTP on", sa[0], "port", sa[1], "..."
>>>
>>> def runIt(self):
>>> self.httpd.serve_forever()
>>>
>>> server = MyWebServer()
>>> server.runIt()
>>>
>>> </code>
>>>
>>> I want to access the foo and bar variables from do_GET, but I can't
>>> figure out how. I suppose this is something to do with new-style vs.
>>> old-style classes, but I lost for a solution.
>>
>> It'd have been good to tell us that this was on Python 2.7
>>
>> Is MyWebServer class intended to have exactly one instance? If so, you
>> could save the instance as a class attribute, and trivially access it
>> from outside the class.
>>
>> If it might have more than one instance, then we'd need to know more
>> about the class BaseHTTPServer.HTTPServer, From a quick glance at the
>> docs, it looks like you get an attribute called server. So inside the
>> do_GET() method, you should be able to access self.server.foo and
>> self.server.bar
>>
>> See http://docs.python.org/2/library/basehttpserver.html
>>
> That doesn't work. Maybe you mean something that I'm missing?
> Setting a breakpoint in do_GET:
> Pdb) b 7
> Breakpoint 1 at
> /home/tom/Desktop/tidy/Python/webserver/simpleWebserver.py:7
> (Pdb) c
> Serving HTTP on 127.0.0.1 port 8000 ...
> > /home/tom/Desktop/tidy/Python/webserver/simpleWebserver.py(7)do_GET()
> -> self.send_response(200)
> (Pdb) self
> <__main__.MyRequestHandler instance at 0x7ff20dde3bd8>
> (Pdb) self.server
> <BaseHTTPServer.HTTPServer instance at 0x7ff20dde3830>
> (Pdb) dir(self.server)
> ['RequestHandlerClass', '_BaseServer__is_shut_down',
> '_BaseServer__shutdown_request', '__doc__', '__init__', '__module__',
> '_handle_request_noblock', 'address_family', 'allow_reuse_address',
> 'close_request', 'fileno', 'finish_request', 'get_request',
> 'handle_error', 'handle_request', 'handle_timeout', 'process_request',
> 'request_queue_size', 'serve_forever', 'server_activate',
> 'server_address', 'server_bind', 'server_close', 'server_name',
> 'server_port', 'shutdown', 'shutdown_request', 'socket', 'socket_type',
> 'timeout', 'verify_request']
> (Pdb) self.server.foo
> *** AttributeError: HTTPServer instance has no attribute 'foo'
>
I did a quick scan of the page whose link I showed you above. It
doesn't say there what 'server' attribute actually is. Sounds like you
need to combine my suggestion with Dylan's. Once your server class
inherits from the HTTPServer class, there should be an attriute 'foo'.
But my understanding is still quite superficial, so you'll have to
continue the good testing you're already doing.
--
DaveA
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| From | Dylan Evans <dylan@dje.me> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-04-05 22:27 +1000 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.135.1365164884.3114.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #42802 |
[Multipart message — attachments visible in raw view] — view raw
On 05/04/2013 9:09 PM, "Tom P" <werotizy@freent.dd> wrote:
>
> First, here's a sample test program:
> <code>
> import sys
> from BaseHTTPServer import HTTPServer, BaseHTTPRequestHandler
>
> class MyRequestHandler(BaseHTTPRequestHandler, object):
> def do_GET(self):
> top_self = super(MyRequestHandler, self) # try to access
MyWebServer instance
> self.send_response(200)
> self.send_header('Content-type', 'text/html')
> self.end_headers()
> self.wfile.write("thanks for trying, but I'd like to get at
self.foo and self.bar")
> return
>
> class MyWebServer(object):
> def __init__(self):
> self.foo = "foo" # these are what I want to access from inside
do_GET
> self.bar = "bar"
> self.httpd = HTTPServer(('127.0.0.1', 8000), MyRequestHandler)
> sa = self.httpd.socket.getsockname()
> print "Serving HTTP on", sa[0], "port", sa[1], "..."
>
> def runIt(self):
> self.httpd.serve_forever()
>
> server = MyWebServer()
> server.runIt()
>
> </code>
>
> I want to access the foo and bar variables from do_GET, but I can't
figure out how. I suppose this is something to do with new-style vs.
old-style classes, but I lost for a solution.
Consider inheriting HTTPServer in MyWebServer which is passed to the
request handler.
> --
> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
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| From | Tom P <werotizy@freent.dd> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-04-05 15:21 +0200 |
| Message-ID | <as81e9Fu028U1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #42811 |
On 04/05/2013 02:27 PM, Dylan Evans wrote:
> On 05/04/2013 9:09 PM, "Tom P" <werotizy@freent.dd> wrote:
>>
>> First, here's a sample test program:
>> <code>
>> import sys
>> from BaseHTTPServer import HTTPServer, BaseHTTPRequestHandler
>>
>> class MyRequestHandler(BaseHTTPRequestHandler, object):
>> def do_GET(self):
>> top_self = super(MyRequestHandler, self) # try to access
> MyWebServer instance
>> self.send_response(200)
>> self.send_header('Content-type', 'text/html')
>> self.end_headers()
>> self.wfile.write("thanks for trying, but I'd like to get at
> self.foo and self.bar")
>> return
>>
>> class MyWebServer(object):
>> def __init__(self):
>> self.foo = "foo" # these are what I want to access from inside
> do_GET
>> self.bar = "bar"
>> self.httpd = HTTPServer(('127.0.0.1', 8000), MyRequestHandler)
>> sa = self.httpd.socket.getsockname()
>> print "Serving HTTP on", sa[0], "port", sa[1], "..."
>>
>> def runIt(self):
>> self.httpd.serve_forever()
>>
>> server = MyWebServer()
>> server.runIt()
>>
>> </code>
>>
>> I want to access the foo and bar variables from do_GET, but I can't
> figure out how. I suppose this is something to do with new-style vs.
> old-style classes, but I lost for a solution.
>
> Consider inheriting HTTPServer in MyWebServer which is passed to the
> request handler.
>
That was the next thing I was going to try, thanks.
>> --
>> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
>
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| From | Tom P <werotizy@freent.dd> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-04-06 17:05 +0200 |
| Message-ID | <asartjFisjrU1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #42811 |
On 04/05/2013 02:27 PM, Dylan Evans wrote:
> On 05/04/2013 9:09 PM, "Tom P" <werotizy@freent.dd> wrote:
>>
>> First, here's a sample test program:
>> <code>
>> import sys
>> from BaseHTTPServer import HTTPServer, BaseHTTPRequestHandler
>>
>> class MyRequestHandler(BaseHTTPRequestHandler, object):
>> def do_GET(self):
>> top_self = super(MyRequestHandler, self) # try to access
> MyWebServer instance
>> self.send_response(200)
>> self.send_header('Content-type', 'text/html')
>> self.end_headers()
>> self.wfile.write("thanks for trying, but I'd like to get at
> self.foo and self.bar")
>> return
>>
>> class MyWebServer(object):
>> def __init__(self):
>> self.foo = "foo" # these are what I want to access from inside
> do_GET
>> self.bar = "bar"
>> self.httpd = HTTPServer(('127.0.0.1', 8000), MyRequestHandler)
>> sa = self.httpd.socket.getsockname()
>> print "Serving HTTP on", sa[0], "port", sa[1], "..."
>>
>> def runIt(self):
>> self.httpd.serve_forever()
>>
>> server = MyWebServer()
>> server.runIt()
>>
>> </code>
>>
>> I want to access the foo and bar variables from do_GET, but I can't
> figure out how. I suppose this is something to do with new-style vs.
> old-style classes, but I lost for a solution.
>
> Consider inheriting HTTPServer in MyWebServer which is passed to the
> request handler.
>
>> --
>> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
>
I keep getting the same problem - if inherit from any of these classes
in BaseHTTPServer and try to use super(class, self) to initiate the
higher class, I get the error "TypeError: must be type, not classobj" -
in other words, these are old-style classes.
That means that in this call -
self.httpd = MyHTTPServer(('127.0.0.1', 8000), MyRequestHandler)
there doesn't seem to be a way to define a
class MyHTTPServer(HTTPServer)
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| From | Dylan Evans <dylan@dje.me> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-04-07 11:51 +1000 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.221.1365299497.3114.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #42918 |
[Multipart message — attachments visible in raw view] — view raw
On Sun, Apr 7, 2013 at 1:05 AM, Tom P <werotizy@freent.dd> wrote:
> On 04/05/2013 02:27 PM, Dylan Evans wrote:
>
>> On 05/04/2013 9:09 PM, "Tom P" <werotizy@freent.dd> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> First, here's a sample test program:
>>> <code>
>>> import sys
>>> from BaseHTTPServer import HTTPServer, BaseHTTPRequestHandler
>>>
>>> class MyRequestHandler(**BaseHTTPRequestHandler, object):
>>> def do_GET(self):
>>> top_self = super(MyRequestHandler, self) # try to access
>>>
>> MyWebServer instance
>>
>>> self.send_response(200)
>>> self.send_header('Content-**type', 'text/html')
>>> self.end_headers()
>>> self.wfile.write("thanks for trying, but I'd like to get at
>>>
>> self.foo and self.bar")
>>
>>> return
>>>
>>> class MyWebServer(object):
>>> def __init__(self):
>>> self.foo = "foo" # these are what I want to access from inside
>>>
>> do_GET
>>
>>> self.bar = "bar"
>>> self.httpd = HTTPServer(('127.0.0.1', 8000), MyRequestHandler)
>>> sa = self.httpd.socket.getsockname(**)
>>> print "Serving HTTP on", sa[0], "port", sa[1], "..."
>>>
>>> def runIt(self):
>>> self.httpd.serve_forever()
>>>
>>> server = MyWebServer()
>>> server.runIt()
>>>
>>> </code>
>>>
>>> I want to access the foo and bar variables from do_GET, but I can't
>>>
>> figure out how. I suppose this is something to do with new-style vs.
>> old-style classes, but I lost for a solution.
>>
>> Consider inheriting HTTPServer in MyWebServer which is passed to the
>> request handler.
>>
>> --
>>> http://mail.python.org/**mailman/listinfo/python-list<http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list>
>>>
>>
>>
> I keep getting the same problem - if inherit from any of these classes in
> BaseHTTPServer and try to use super(class, self) to initiate the higher
> class, I get the error "TypeError: must be type, not classobj" - in other
> words, these are old-style classes.
> That means that in this call -
> self.httpd = MyHTTPServer(('127.0.0.1', 8000), MyRequestHandler)
>
> there doesn't seem to be a way to define a
> class MyHTTPServer(HTTPServer)
>
>
>
You can call the __init__ method on the class as a workaround for it being
old style. This works on 2.7
from BaseHTTPServer import HTTPServer, BaseHTTPRequestHandler
class MyRequestHandler(BaseHTTPRequestHandler):
def do_GET(self):
self.send_response(200)
self.send_header('Content-type', 'text/plain')
self.end_headers()
self.wfile.write('Got foo? %s' % self.server.foo)
class MyWebServer(HTTPServer):
def __init__(self):
self.foo = 'foo'
HTTPServer.__init__(self, ('127.0.0.1', 8000), MyRequestHandler)
sa = self.socket.getsockname()
print "Serving HTTP on", sa[0], "port", sa[1]
def runit(self):
self.serve_forever()
server = MyWebServer()
server.runit()
>
>
>
> --
> http://mail.python.org/**mailman/listinfo/python-list<http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list>
>
--
"The UNIX system has a command, nice ... in order to be nice to the other
users. Nobody ever uses it." - Andrew S. Tanenbaum
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| From | Tom P <werotizy@freent.dd> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-04-06 23:38 +0200 |
| Subject | Re: The SOLUTION HTTPserver: how to access variables of a higher class |
| Message-ID | <asbiuiFo2c5U1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #42802 |
On 04/05/2013 01:02 PM, Tom P wrote:
ok, after much experimenting it looks like the solution is as follows:
class MyWebServer(object):
def __init__(self):
# self.foo = "foo" delete these from self
# self.bar = "bar"
myServer = HTTPServer
myServer.foo = "foo" #define foo,bar here
myServer.bar = "bar"
self.httpd = myServer(('127.0.0.1', 8000), MyRequestHandler)
Then, in the request handler:
class MyRequestHandler(BaseHTTPRequestHandler):
def do_GET(self):
ss=self.server
print ss.foo
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