Now I know that this has been brought quite a few times in the past. Still, with the slowness of Python method calls, a switch-based coding style would be nice way to implement fast token based processing of data in Python rather than C. Currently, dispatching of execution based on the value of one variable is usually implemented by having some dictionary of possible values and then calling method which implement the different branches of execution. This works well for code which uses medium sized methods, but fails badly for small ones such as code which is often used in method callback based parsers. The alternative is using lengthy if x == 'one': ... elif x == 'two': ... elif x == 'three': ... else: ...default case... constructs. Wouldn't it make sense to enable the byte code compiler to take the above construct and turn it into a dictionary based switch statement ? I'm not talking about adding syntax to the language, it would just be nice to have the compiler recognize this kind of code (somehow; perhaps with some extra help) and produce optimized code for it, possibly using new opcodes for the switching operation. Thoughts ? -- Marc-Andre Lemburg CEO eGenix.com Software GmbH ______________________________________________________________________ Consulting & Company: http://www.egenix.com/ Python Software: http://www.lemburg.com/python/
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