On 1/18/2016 23:27, Greg Ewing wrote: > Brett Cannon wrote: >> For me, I don't see how:: >> >> if (x != 10) >> return NULL; >> do_some_more(); >> >> is any clearer or more readable than:: >> >> if (x != 10) { >> return NULL; >> } >> do_some_more(); > > Maybe not for that piece of code on its own, but the version > with braces takes up one more line. Put a few of those together, > and you can't fit as much code on the screen. If it makes the > difference between being able to see e.g. the whole of a loop > at once vs. having to scroll up and down, it could make the > code as a whole harder to read. > When someone trying to make this argument in #python for Python code... the response is newlines are free. Almost this entire thread has me confused - the arguments against are kind of hypocritical; You are developing a language with a built in design ethic, and ignoring those ethics while building the implementation itself. Newlines are free, use them Explicit > Implicit - Explicitly scope everything. I am not a core developer, but I just kind of feel its hypocritical to oppose always using brackets for the development of *python*
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