On 8/11/06, Neal Becker <ndbecker2 at gmail.com> wrote: > Guido van Rossum wrote: > > > On 8/10/06, James Y Knight <foom at fuhm.net> wrote: > >> It makes just as much sense as assigning to an array access, and the > >> semantics would be pretty similar. > > > > No. Array references (x[i]) and attribute references (x.a) represent > > "locations". Function calls represent values. This is no different > > than the distinction between lvalues and rvalues in C. > > > > Except this syntax is valid in c++ where X() is a constructor call: > > X(whatever) += 2; is (or can be) valid c++ As I said before, C++ has a fundamentally different concept of what assignment means; it is of no use for understanding Python's assignment. Actually it is a big hindrance knowing about C++ assignment because it's difficult to explain to C++ users why Python can't and won't allow assignment to be overloaded. -- --Guido van Rossum (home page: http://www.python.org/~guido/)
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