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Everything in Python is an object, or so the saying goes. If you want to create your own custom objects, with their own properties and methods, you use Python’s class object to make that happen.
Python classes can make your code more complicated than necessary. So when should you use classes, and when should you use standard functions instead?
Python’s implementation of object orientation does have a few quirks. For example, if you create a class variable, it can be read from a subclass without specifying scope like you’d expect.
This post explains how to use classes in Python. Including: how to use static and private methods, constructors, and more!
Here's how to make classes, fields, methods, constructors, and objects work together in your Java programs.
Python objects and modulesThese dynamically typed objects are referred to as mutable, and you also can create immutable objects whose value and types can’t be changed – the tuples we discussed ...