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oop - In Python, can you call an instance method of class A, but pass in an instance of class B?

In the interest of reusing some existing code that was defined as an instance method of a different class, I was tying to do something like the following:

class Foo(object):
  def __init__(self):
    self.name = "Foo"

  def hello(self):
    print "Hello, I am " + self.name + "."

class Bar(object):
  def __init__(self):
    self.name = "Bar"


bar = Bar()
Foo.hello(bar)

but that results in:

TypeError: unbound method hello() must be called with Foo instance as first argument (got Bar instance instead)

Is something like this possible?


I should have been clear that I know this is a bad idea. Obviously the real solution is a bit of refactoring. I just figured there must be a way, and it turns out there is.

Thanks for the comments.

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by (71.8m points)

Looks like this works:

Foo.hello.im_func(bar)

Hello, I am Bar.

I guess I need to read a this little harder...


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