B
Bruno Desthuilliers
Mr.SpOOn a écrit :
Conceptually, an abstract class is a class that is not intented to be
instanciated directly but used as a parent class. The simplest way to
get such behaviour is to just write your base class and avoid
instanciating it.
Hi,
I'm going to work on a project to represent some musical theory in
Python, in an object oriented way.
I have to manage many elements of music such as notes, intervals,
scales, chords and so on. All these elements share properties and
behavior, so what I want to do is an abstract class "Note" and other
subclasses, for example "NaturalNote", "FlatNote", "SharpNote" etc.
The idea is not original, I read it in some papers where they talk
about an implementation in smalltalk.
I want to use Python (of course) and I'd like to know what is the
practice in such a case. I mean, in python there aren't abstract
classes, but I read about some way to emulate the same behavior.
What do you suggest me?
Conceptually, an abstract class is a class that is not intented to be
instanciated directly but used as a parent class. The simplest way to
get such behaviour is to just write your base class and avoid
instanciating it.