On 9/20/05, Phillip J. Eby <pje at telecommunity.com> wrote: > At 12:17 PM 9/20/2005 -0700, Guido van Rossum wrote: > >I think I'd prefer (if <expr> then <expr> else <expre>) i.e. no > >colons. None of the other expression forms (list comprehensions and > >generator expressions) involving statement keywords use colons. > > +1, despite the fact that we seem on a slippery slope towards becoming a > kind of infix Lisp. ;) Between (yield x), (x for x in y), and now (if x > then y else z), it seems that parentheses are all the rage now. Will we get > (try <expr> finally <expr>) next? <0.5 wink> > +1 from me as well. The use will be much more obvious to a newbie than ``<expr> ? <expr> : <expr>``. And I have used the syntactic-heavy listcomps in Haskell and I must say that Python's version is much nicer. I like the wordy version. =) > > > > *If* you want general community input, I would suggest a runoff ballot with > > > those four choices (and a summary of pros and cons of each), or fewer if > > > you see any as unacceptible. > > > >If there's one thing I've learned from the PEP 308 vote, it is that > >votes for language don't work. I prefer some discussion on Python-dev > >after which I pick one. > > Also +1. :) > +1 from me, although I sure got lambasted by some people when I said I liked this style during the whole decorator debate. =) -Brett
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