while messing around with an example from a book:
class Quick():
    def __str__(self):
        return "\n".join(f"{k}: {v}" for k, v in vars(self).items())
class User(Quick):
    def __init__(self, first, last, location, gender):
        super().__init__()
        self.first = first
        self.last = last
        self.location = location
        self.gender = gender
        self.loginattempt = 0
    def mmplusattempt(self):
        self.loginattempt += 1
    def mmresetattempt(self):
        self.loginattempt = 0
    def __str__(self):
        return "\n".join(f"{k}: {v}" for k, v in vars(self).items())
class Admin(User):
    def __init__(self, first, last, location, gender):
        super().__init__(first, last, location, gender)
        self.privileges = ["delete post", "ban user", "shutdown server", "restart server"]
    def show(self):
        for p in self.privileges:
            print(f"This user can: {p}. \n")
        
admin = Admin("ADMIN", "ADMIN", "SERVER ROOM", "ADMIN")
print(admin.show())
this for some reason outputs :
This user can: delete post. 
This user can: ban user. 
This user can: shutdown server. 
This user can: restart server. 
None
  
I am not sure why it prints None. Changed show() to check for null value:
def show(self):
        for p in self.privileges:
            if p != None:
                print(f"This user can: {p}. \n")
still outputs None.
I thought maybe the loop wasn't working like I intended it to so added a null value in self.privileges to see if the loop was checking for null value correctly:
self.privileges = ["delete post", "ban user", "shutdown server", None, "restart server"]
output:
└─$ python3 classuser.py
This user can: delete post. 
This user can: ban user. 
This user can: shutdown server. 
This user can: restart server. 
None
Obviously the if test is working correctly. Where is this null value coming from?
 
    