On Mon, Mar 08, 2004, Skip Montanaro wrote: > > > >> I'd expect w2() to be passed whatever w1() returns, regardless of > >> whether it's callable. It should raise an exception if it gets > >> something it can't handle. > > aahz> No, that's not right. If > > aahz> def foo() [w1, w2]: pass > > aahz> is valid, this must also always be valid: > > aahz> def foo() [w2]: pass > > Can you explain why this must be the case? I agree that coupling between w1 > and w2 should be discouraged (see my ast example). Principle of least surprise, essentially. There are already going to be enough obscure uses for this; let's try to keep the completely whacky out of it. You'll have to come up with an awfully convincing use case to change my mind. -- Aahz (aahz at pythoncraft.com) <*> http://www.pythoncraft.com/ "Do not taunt happy fun for loops. Do not change lists you are looping over." --Remco Gerlich, comp.lang.python
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