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1. What the class is for and when it's appropriate for the developer to use it.
 
1. What the class is for and when it's appropriate for the developer to use it.
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2. What the class is derived from (if anything), what base-class methods/attributes it overrides/extends/hides and what new methods/attributes are provided. *
 
2. What the class is derived from (if anything), what base-class methods/attributes it overrides/extends/hides and what new methods/attributes are provided. *
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3. Methods and attributes reference (it could be appropriate for this part to be generated from the code).
 
3. Methods and attributes reference (it could be appropriate for this part to be generated from the code).
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* Pardon me if that's not Python-speak: I'm new to the Python language.  Methods are the things in a class that start with "def"; attributes are the class's data.
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(*) Pardon me if that's not Python-speak: I'm new to the Python language.  Methods are the things in a class that start with "def"; attributes are the class's data.
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A nice-to-have in all of this would be the ability to call up the relevent documentation while coding, as can be done in Visual Studio.
 
A nice-to-have in all of this would be the ability to call up the relevent documentation while coding, as can be done in Visual Studio.
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[[User:Davewa|dave]] 20:03, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
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