The short answer to
Am I calling super(type) incorrectly here or is there something I'm missing?
is: yes, you're calling it incorrectly... AND (indeed, because) there is something you're missing.
But don't feel bad; this is an extremely difficult subject.
The documentation notes that
If the second argument is omitted, the super object returned is unbound.
The use case for unbound super
objects is extremely narrow and rare. See these articles by Michele Simionato for his discussion on super()
:
Also, he argues strongly for removing unbound super
from Python 3 here.
I said you were calling it "incorrectly" (though correctness is largely meaningless without context, and a toy example doesn't give much context). Because unbound super
is so rare, and possibly just flat-out unjustified, as argued by Simionato, the "correct" way to use super()
is to provide the second argument.
In your case, the simplest way to make your example work is
class First(object):
@staticmethod
def getlist():
return ['first']
class Second(First):
@staticmethod
def getlist():
l = super(Second, Second).getlist() # note the 2nd argument
l.append('second')
return l
a = Second.getlist()
print a
If you think it looks funny that way, you're not wrong. But I think what most people are expecting when they see super(X)
(or hoping for when they try it in their own code) is what Python gives you if you do super(X, X)
.
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