At 01:04 PM 2/26/04 -0600, Doug Holton wrote: > > Skip> If you are going to add [...] as a function modifier syntax, > > Skip> I would argue that it should allow the full power of list > > Skip> (or generator) comprehensions. > > > > Agreed. And why limit it to lists - why not any expression that > > evaluates to a list? Or maybe any sequence? Which is one reason > > that a bare "[...]" doesn't seem sufficient. > > >The "as" syntax is easier to understand and more readable, but you'd like >to have the full power of lists as well (plus make the parsing >easier). When there is just a single item though, the list syntax seems >overkill. > >I can already tell if this feature is added it will likely stick with the >list syntax instead of the "as" keyword because that is the easier >solution to code. > >But here is an "as" solution that doesn't require extra coding for now. >Have the parser check for a single item OR a list of items. You could add >an "as" keyword but essentially ignore it in this case. This would mean >though that this would not work: >def myfunc(x, y) as synchronized, classmethod: > ... >You'd have to use the list syntax for multiple modifiers. > > >If there is a decision to add the "as" keyword, here are some possible >future expansions of its use. What it does is make the use of modifiers >and type checking more readable. > >In general "X as Y" would mean --> Y(X) >and "X as [Y, Z]" would mean --> Z(Y(X)) > >for example: >X = temp_val as int > means --> x = int(temp_val) > >thisobject = obj as MyType > means --> thisobject = MyType(obj) Hm, that sounds more like syntax for PEP 246 (adaptation). >Then there are Visual Basic -like params (let's not start a war about it): > >def func1(x as int, y as float): > ... This also seems like syntax for adaptation. But I don't see this latter use as an argument for "as", since: def func1(x [int], y [float]): would also be sensible syntax. But, the real monkeywrench here is that: def func1(x as int, y as float) as staticmethod: now looks like it *returns* a staticmethod, which is wrong. So, thanks to your argument, I'm now leaning a little more towards using [] rather than "as", because "as" looks like syntax that should be reserved for adaptation at a future time. :)
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