Sebastian Haase wrote: > On Mon, Jul 28, 2008 at 10:59 AM, <skip at pobox.com> wrote: >> Ondrej> i.e. the str on list (and tuple and dict) calls repr() on the >> Ondrej> elements, instead of str. This really seems to me like a bug. >> Ondrej> Because if I wanted the repr() representation, I'd call repr() >> Ondrej> on the list/tuple/dict. If I want a nice readable >> Ondrej> representation, I call str(). That's the philosophy, no? >> >> I think this is the case which calls for the distinction: >> >> >>> str(["1", "2", "3"]) >> "['1', '2', '3']" >> >>> str([1, 2, 3]) >> '[1, 2, 3]' >> >> If the first case did as you suggested you couldn't distinguish it from the >> second. >> > Look at this -- it seems to me that it should work fine.... > ---- Python 2.5.1 (r251:54863, Apr 15 2008, 22:57:26) >>>> str("qwer") > 'qwer' >>>> repr("qwer") > "'qwer'" > No it doesn't. What's happening in these examples is that the interpreter is calling repr() on the expression result - otherwise you wouldn't see the quotes: >>> str("qwer") 'qwer' >>> print str("qwer") qwer >>> regards Steve -- Steve Holden +1 571 484 6266 +1 800 494 3119 Holden Web LLC http://www.holdenweb.com/
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