TypeError: super() takes at least 1 argument (0 given) error is specific to any python version?
Yes, the 0-argument syntax is specific to Python 3, see What's New in Python 3.0 and PEP 3135 -- New Super.
In Python 2 and code that must be cross-version compatible, just stick to passing in the class object and instance explicitly.
Yes, there are "backports" available that make a no-argument version of super()
work in Python 2 (like the future
library) but these require a number of hacks that include a full scan of the class hierarchy to find a matching function object. This is both fragile and slow, and simply not worth the "convenience".
This is because of version of python. Check your python version with [python --version] it might be 2.7
In 2.7 use this [ super(baseclass, self).__init__() ]
class Bird(object):
def __init__(self):
print("Bird")
def whatIsThis(self):
print("This is bird which can not swim")
class Animal(Bird):
def __init__(self):
super(Bird,self).__init__()
print("Animal")
def whatIsThis(self):
print("THis is animal which can swim")
a1 = Animal()
a1.whatIsThis()
> In 3.0 or more use this [ super().__init__()]
class Bird(object):
def __init__(self):
print("Bird")
def whatIsThis(self):
print("This is bird which can not swim")
class Animal(Bird):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
print("Animal")
def whatIsThis(self):
print("THis is animal which can swim")
a1 = Animal()
a1.whatIsThis()
You can use the future library to have a Python2/Python3 compatibility.
The super function is back-ported.