[Aahz] > > > > I'm not trying to be flip here -- I'm trying to make the point that in > > my opinion, having a uniform rule is preferable to catching particular > > cases that are sometimes mistakes. > > It's not so much that '' in 'abc' is a mistake as that there's no > sensible answer to be given. When Python can't figure out how to > deliver a sensible answer, it raises an exception: "In the face of > ambiguity, refuse the temptation to guess." In what way does find('') return a sensible answer? >>> 'help'.find('') 0 >>> 'help'.find('h') 0 >>> 'help'.find('e') 1 >>> 'help'.find('l') 2 >>> 'help'[0] 'h' >>> 'help'[1] 'e' >>> 'help'[2] 'l' >>> s = 'help' >>> s[s.find('')] 'h' >>> s[s.find('h')] 'h' I don't see the logic in this and I couldn't find anything in the docs to explain this behavior. I'm guessing this is old hat for most of you, but I find this a bit surprising myself. -- Patrick K. O'Brien Orbtech ----------------------------------------------- "Your source for Python programming expertise." ----------------------------------------------- Web: http://www.orbtech.com/web/pobrien/ Blog: http://www.orbtech.com/blog/pobrien/ Wiki: http://www.orbtech.com/wiki/PatrickOBrien -----------------------------------------------
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