> I'd like to solicit feedback on what everyone thinks about PyChecker. I love it when it works! > Specifically, where should it go? What should it include or not include? > What should the default warnings be? You'll never satisfy everyone. Personally, I write too much code without docstrings, so I find the complaints about missing docstrings annoying. I guess my preference would be to have the default mode ony complain about things that have a high probability of being *coding* errors -- undefined names and the like. I forget if you're checking string formatting conformance yet -- that would also be useful. > I've seen some threads on c.l.p that checker might address. Unfortunately the typical newbie doesn't have access to pychecker yet... > Do you think that there should be something added to the python > FAQ/doc about checker? I'd be willing to write something. Sure! You can add a FAQ entry yourself -- the password is "Spam". > I'm close to exhausting my list of warnings/checks, let me know > if there are additional warnings/checks you can think of. Python version compatibilities would be an interesting area to explore. I would like PyChecker to use a fundamentally different way of scanning modules. I believe that it currently imports the module and then scans the module's __dict__ for classes and functions, and analyses their bytecode. That's fragile, dangerous (if you don't know what a module does you may not want to import it), and sometimes causes spurious errors, like when I have this at the global level: import foo foo.bar() and no other references to the module foo anywhere in the code... You get an error about an unused foo module. > Thanks for your input, > Neal > > PS I sent a patch to python-dev against 2.2a1, but it's 45k. So > it's awating moderator approval. Sorry if this isn't the right > venue for patches. I've approved it, but in general, we'd all prefer it if you submitted patches to the SourceForge patch manager -- that's what it's there for. If you want to discuss it here, post a URL. :-) --Guido van Rossum (home page: http://www.python.org/~guido/)
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