Michael> Well here's one I stumbled across the other day. I don't know Michael> if it's legit, but it's still bad PR: Michael> http://www.gbch.net/gjb/blog/software/discuss/python-sucks.html Michael> For the impatient, he's not at all bothered about the lack of Michael> obscure language feature X. The way I used to format dates using time.strftime does indeed no longer work. Python 2.3: >>> import time >>> time.strftime("%Y-%m-%d", (2005, 6, 4) + (0,)*6) '2005-06-04' Python 2.4 or 2.5: >>> import time >>> time.strftime("%Y-%m-%d", (2005, 6, 4) + (0,)*6) Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? ValueError: day of year out of range >>> time.strftime("%Y-%m-%d", (2005, 6, 4) + (1,)*6) '2005-06-04' I don't actually run into this problem as I've pretty much converted to use datetime in new code. I also realize that's not documented as the way it should be done, but I'm fairly certain it was common usage before the datetime module came along. Still, it is a bit annoying that the (undocumented, but I think de facto) commonly used idiom no longer works. (In fact, it always bothered me a bit that I had to even provide the unused values.) Skip
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