The following code:
#!/usr/bin/env python
import mechanize
class MechanizeSubclass(mechanize.Browser):
def __init__(self,
factory=None,
history=None,
request_class=None,
):
mechanize.Browser.__init__(self, factory, history, request_class)
def open(self, url, data=None,
timeout=mechanize._sockettimeout._GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT):
mechanize.Browser.open(self, url, data, timeout=timeout)
subclass = MechanizeSubclass()
subclass.open('https://uncjobs.northcarolina.edu/applicants/jsp/shared/Welcome_css.jsp')
print subclass.response().read()
generates the error
mechanize._response.httperror_seek_wrapper: HTTP Error 302: Moved Temporarily
I looked at the mechanize code and the Browser.open() method is defined as:
def open(self, url, data=None,
timeout=_sockettimeout._GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT):
return self._mech_open(url, data, timeout=timeout)
and if I change the open() method in my subclass to match this:
class MechanizeSubclass(mechanize.Browser):
...
def open(self, url, data=None,
timeout=mechanize._sockettimeout._GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT):
return self._mech_open(url, data, timeout=timeout)
then it works fine. But I still don't really understand why the first definition using mechanize.Browser.open(self, url, data, timeout=timeout) doesn't work. Shouldn't they be equivalent? This is with python 2.6 with mechanize 0.2.5.