On 2/22/2011 6:32 PM, Senthil Kumaran wrote: >> On Tue, Feb 22, 2011 at 6:01 PM, Steve Holden<steve at holdenweb.com> wrote: >>> ... It would appear from tests >>> that "{0[X]}".format(...) first tries to convert the string "X" to in >>> integer. If it succeeds then __getitem__() is called with the integer as an >>> argument, otherwise it is called with the string itself as an argument. Is >>> this correct? >> >> This is addressed in the PEP 3101: >> """ >> The rules for parsing an item key are very simple. >> If it starts with a digit, then it is treated as a number, otherwise >> it is used as a string. >> """ http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3101/ > > To the other question : > >> Furthermore, how does one access the key '1' in a format statement? >> ~Ethan~ > > I think, parsing rule already helps to understand the problem with the > key like '1'. > The PEP also explicitly states that: > > """ > Because keys are not quote-delimited, it is not possible to > specify arbitrary dictionary keys (e.g., the strings "10" or > ":-]") from within a format string. > """ Is this all specific in the lib docs? If not, it should be. -- Terry Jan Reedy
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