>>>>> "GvR" == Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org> writes: GvR> I always think of the type of a list as "list of T" while I GvR> think of a tuple's type as "tuple of length N with items of GvR> types T1, T2, T3, ..., TN". So [1, 2] and [1, 2, 3] are both GvR> "list of int" (and "list of Number" and "list of Object", of GvR> course) while ("hello", 42) is a "2-tuple with items str and GvR> int" and (42, "hello", 3.14) is a "3-tuple with items int, GvR> str, float". Of course (1, 2, 3) fits under that description, where, just by chance <wink> T1 == T2 == T3. But one of the ways I think about it is the tuple's relationship to argument and return passing. It's the tuple that's used when multiple values are returned from a function and they are almost always heterogeneous. And while lists can be used for unpacking sequences, I tend to think of tuples when I want record types, e.g. rec = magic(blah) length, prefix, interface = rec -Barry
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