But the main advantage comes with multiple inheritance, where all sorts of fun stuff can happen. Enforcing super to appear first, enforces that constructor bodies are executed in the correct order which would be In fact, multiple inheritance is the only case where super() is of any use
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I would not recommend using it with classes using linear inheritance, where it's just useless overhead.
Super() is a special use of the super keyword where you call a parameterless parent constructor
In general, the super keyword can be used to call overridden methods, access hidden fields or invoke a superclass's constructor. The one with super has greater flexibility The call chain for the methods can be intercepted and functionality injected. Super e>) says that it's some type which is an ancestor (superclass) of e
Extends e>) says that it's some type which is a subclass of e (in both cases e itself is okay.) so the constructor uses the Extends e form so it guarantees that when it fetches values from the collection, they will all be e or some subclass (i.e 'super' object has no attribute '__sklearn_tags__'
This occurs when i invoke the fit method on the randomizedsearchcv object
I attempted to tune the hyperparameters of an xgbregressor. I wrote the following code When i try to run it as at the end of the file i get this stacktrace 'super' object has no attribute do_something class parent
What is the difference between list< I used to use list< Extends t>, but it does not allow me to add elements to it list.add (e), whereas the li. The automatic insertion of super () by the compiler allows this