Here is an example of basic overriding in Python (for the sake of clarity and compatibility with both Python 2 and 3, using new style class and print
with ()
):
class Parent(object):
def introduce(self):
print("Hello!")
def print_name(self):
print("Parent")
class Child(Parent):
def print_name(self):
print("Child")
p = Parent()
c = Child()
p.introduce()
p.print_name()
c.introduce()
c.print_name()
$ python basic_override.py
Hello!
Parent
Hello!
Child
When the Child
class is created, it inherits the methods of the Parent
class. This means that any methods that the parent class has, the child class will also have. In the example, the introduce
is defined for the Child
class because it is defined for Parent
, despite not being defined explicitly in the class definition of Child
.
In this example, the overriding occurs when Child
defines its own print_name
method. If this method was not declared, then c.print_name()
would have printed "Parent"
. However, Child
has overriden the Parent
's definition of print_name
, and so now upon calling c.print_name()
, the word "Child"
is printed.