Possible Duplicate:
What is the difference between @staticmethod and @classmethod in Python?
I have a few questions about staticmethods in classes. I will start by giving an example.
Example one:
class Static:
def __init__(self, first, last):
self.first = first
self.last = last
self.age = randint(0, 50)
def printName(self):
return self.first + self.last
@staticmethod
def printInfo():
return "Hello %s, your age is %s" % (self.first + self.last, self.age)
x = Static("Ephexeve", "M").printInfo()
Outputs:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/home/ephexeve/Workspace/Tests/classestest.py", line 90, in <module>
x = Static("Ephexeve", "M").printInfo()
File "/home/ephexeve/Workspace/Tests/classestest.py", line 88, in printInfo
return "Hello %s, your age is %s" % (self.first + self.last, self.age)
NameError: global name 'self' is not defined
Example two:
class Static:
def __init__(self, first, last):
self.first = first
self.last = last
self.age = randint(0, 50)
def printName(self):
return self.first + self.last
@staticmethod
def printInfo(first, last, age = randint(0, 50)):
print "Hello %s, your age is %s" % (first + last, age)
return
x = Static("Ephexeve", "M")
x.printInfo("Ephexeve", " M") # Looks the same, but the function is different.
Outputs
Hello Ephexeve M, your age is 18
I see I cannot call any self.attribute in a staticmethods, I am just not really sure when and why to use it. In my mind, if you create a class with a few attributed, perhaps you want to use them later on, and not have a staticmethod where all attributes are not callable. Anyone can explain me this? Python is my first programming langunge, so if this is the same in Java for example, I don't know.