bokr at oz.net (Bengt Richter) wrote: > On Wed, 01 Feb 2006 12:33:36 +0000, "Gustavo J. A. M. Carneiro" <gjc at inescporto.pt> wrote: > [...] > > Hmm.. I'm beginning to think 13r16 or 16r13 look too cryptic to the > >casual observer; perhaps a suffix letter is more readable, since we > >don't need arbitrary radix support anyway. [snip discussion over radix and compliments] I hope I'm not the only one who thinks that "simple is better than complex", at least when it comes to numeric constants. Certainly it would be _convenient_ to express constants in a radix other than decimal, hexidecimal, or octal, but to me, it all looks like noise. Peronally, I was on board for the removal of octal literals, if only because I find _seeing_ a leading zero without something else (like the 'x' for hexidecimal) to be difficult, and because I've found little use for them in my work (decimals and hex are usually all I need). Should it change for me? Of course not, but I think that adding different ways to spell integer values will tend to confuse new and seasoned python users. Some will like the flexibility that adding new options offers, but I believe such a change will be a net loss for the understandability of those pieces of code which use it. - Josiah
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