In python, why is recommended to inherit any class we make from the class object , why not directly make it as the base class??
An important thing I noticed is that the declaration __slots__ does not work if I make my class as a base class (instead as a subclass of the class object).
What other advantages/disadvantages do I have by inheriting my class from the class object?
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Karl Knechtel
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Pushpak Dagade
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This is not quite a duplicate, but please refer to http://stackoverflow.com/questions/54867/old-style-and-new-style-classes-in-python . – Karl Knechtel Jan 08 '11 at 15:53
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possible duplicate of [python class inherits object](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4015417/python-class-inherits-object) – Jan 08 '11 at 16:59
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you can find this easily by searching for "python inherit from object" – Jan 08 '11 at 17:00
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In Python2, you must inherit from object in order to create a "new-style" class. Things like descriptors, super and __slots__ do not work correctly with "old-style" classes, but old-style classes remained for backwards compatibility.
In Python3, all classes are new-style classes, so inheriting from object is no longer necessary.
unutbu
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when you inheriting from the object you create new style class, without it you have old style class see: http://www.python.org/doc/newstyle/ for more
virhilo
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