It's method overloading, not method overriding. And in Python, you historically do it all in one function:
class A:
def stackoverflow(self, i='some_default_value'):
print('only method')
ob=A()
ob.stackoverflow(2)
ob.stackoverflow()
See the Default Argument Values section of the Python tutorial. See "Least Astonishment" and the Mutable Default Argument for a common mistake to avoid.
See PEP 443 for information about the single dispatch generic functions added in Python 3.4:
>>> from functools import singledispatch
>>> @singledispatch
... def fun(arg, verbose=False):
... if verbose:
... print("Let me just say,", end=" ")
... print(arg)
>>> @fun.register(int)
... def _(arg, verbose=False):
... if verbose:
... print("Strength in numbers, eh?", end=" ")
... print(arg)
...
>>> @fun.register(list)
... def _(arg, verbose=False):
... if verbose:
... print("Enumerate this:")
... for i, elem in enumerate(arg):
... print(i, elem)
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