Currently in a situation where I have a series of classes that turn an API request JSON into objects. The objects are modeled after my database schema. I think the part that I'm struggling with is how to represent those entity relationships that are formed with foreign keys in my database.
The following classes are just for an example, the instance variables are much different for my application's schema.
class Table(ABC):
def __init__(self):
# stuff
@abstractmethod
def validateSchema(self):
"""Validates the resources column values."""
pass
class ClassRoom(Table):
def __init__(self, id, location_id, location):
super().__init__()
self.id = id
self.location = Location(location_id, location)
def validateSchema(self):
# stuff
class Location(Table):
def __init__(self, id, location):
super().__init__()
self.id = id
self.location = location
def validateSchema(self):
# stuff
The part I'm concerned about is when I am creating an object of the same type as the class that has the object as an instance variable.
class ClassRoom(Table):
def __init__(self, id, location_id, location):
# Can I instantiate this class even if it inherits the same parent?
self.location = Location(location_id, location)
Is this ok in OOP? Is there a better way to design my classes?
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire