On Wednesday 05 November 2003 04:02 pm, Guido van Rossum wrote: > > Among the comp.lang.python crowd, nearly everyone supported some form of > > the PEP (with varying preferences on the name or where to put it). The > > community participation rate was high with about 120 posts across four > > threads contributing to hammering out the current version of the pep. > > How many participants in those 120 posts? (I recall a thread where > one individual posted 100 messages. :-) I count 25 separate contributors to threads about PEP 322 (but I only see 75 posts there, and three threads, so I must be missing some of those that Raymond is counting -- or perhaps, not unlikely, they've expired off my newsserver). > > Is there anything else that needs to be done in the way of research, > > voting, or cheerleading for pep to be accepted? > > Yes. I'm getting cold feet about __reversed__. Some folks seem to > think that reversed() can be made to work on many iterators by having > the iterator supply __reversed__; I think this is asking for trouble > (e.g. you already pointed out why it couldn't be done for > enumerate()). I still think it could be, if enumerate kept a reference to its argument, but that's a detail -- I trust your instinct about such design issues (or I wouldn't be using Python...:-). So: let's keep it simple and have reversed be _exactly_ equivalent to (net of performance, hypothetical anomalous "pseudosequences" doing weird things, & exact error kinds/msgs): def reversed(sequence): for x in xrange(len(sequence)-1, -1, -1): yield sequence[x] no __reversed__, no complications, "no nuttin'". Putting that in the current 2.4 pre-alpha will let us start getting some experience with it and see if in the future we want to add refinements (always easier to add than to remove...:-) -- either to reverse or to other iterator-returning calls (e.g. reverse= optional arguments just like in the sort method of lists). Alex
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