In Java, if I call List.toString()
, it will automatically call the toString()
method on each object inside the List. For example, if my list contains objects o1
, o2
, and o3
, list.toString()
would look something like this:
"[" + o1.toString() + ", " + o2.toString() + ", " + o3.toString() + "]"
Is there a way to get similar behavior in Python? I implemented a __str__()
method in my class, but when I print out a list of objects, using:
print 'my list is %s'%(list)
it looks something like this:
[<__main__.cell instance at 0x2a955e95f0>, <__main__.cell instance at 0x2a955e9638>, <__main__.cell instance at 0x2a955e9680>]
how can I get python to call my __str__()
automatically for each element inside the list (or dict for that matter)?
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