I encountered a code which uses the super()
method in 2 different ways, and I can't understand what's the difference in the logic.
I'm learning right now the pygame
module and I got a task to create a class of a Ball
which inherits from Sprite
which is a class from the pygame
module (if I'm not mistaken).
I encountered this code:
import pygame
class Ball(pygame.sprite.Sprite):
def __init__(self, x, y):
super(Ball, self).__init__()
And I can't understand the difference from:
import pygame
class Ball(pygame.sprite.Sprite):
def __init__(self, x, y):
super().__init__()
(Argument of super()
method)
What is the difference between those code blocks in their logic? Why do I need to pass to super()
method arguments? What are those arguments required to be?