[ ...Lot's of stuff about details of warning implementation snipped... ] That's why I only provided the code to check for inconsistent use of returns, not the flag to turn it on and off! In a message I accidentally sent only to Guido and myself on the subject, I outlined my take on things, which really does about exhaust my knowledge/interest on how/when to enable warnings: Guido> I'm not sure I like the fact that you can't turn it off -- Guido> traditionally, Python has had a "no warnings" policy. That has Guido> been diluted a bit (python -t prints warnings) but so far it has Guido> been the default. The only reason for not being able to turn it off was that would require introducing some sort of -w flag, which wasn't the point of the exercise. We can have the -w/-t/-W discussion now. I haven't any particular opinion on the best way to do it, although I would much prefer it be a run-time as opposed to compile-time option. One other issue might be whether or not to ignore an existing .pyc file and always recompile .py's if warnings are enabled. Of course, we're still all adults here (I think), so perhaps it's sufficient to remind people in the docs to delete the desired .pyc files before running with warnings enabled. Guido> I'm wondering if we should introduce a general '-w' flag to turn Guido> on warnings like this (which would subsume -t)? Or perhaps there Guido> should be a -W flag ("no warnings") and warnings should be the Guido> default? -w sounds fine to me. Guido> There are also platform problems, e.g. on the Mac, stderr doesn't Guido> always exist, and on Windows, it doesn't exist if pythonw.exe is Guido> used... Perhaps on those platforms a file could be opened in a standard location to catch stderr (I presume you can detect the lack of stderr at run-time?). While that would force some (more) Unix conventions on programmers on those platforms, it would also provide more cross-platform uniformity. Skip
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