Hello, On Tue, 29 Jan 2019 18:55:37 +0000 MRAB <python at mrabarnett.plus.com> wrote: [] > > https://stackoverflow.com/questions/25445439/what-does-syntaxerror-missing-parentheses-in-call-to-print-mean-in-python > I have a vague recollection that a certain computer system (Amiga?) > had a 'why' command. If it reported an error, you could type "why" > and it would give you more details. > > I suspect that all that was happening was that when the error > occurred it would store the additional details somewhere that the > 'why' command would simply retrieve. Well, a typical Linux install includes "errno" util: $ errno 13 EACCES 13 Permission denied So, hail to error numbers. And indeed, even if some may think they're artifact of 1980'ies, they're alive, well, and useful: $ pylint --help-msg W1651 :deprecated-itertools-function (W1651): *Accessing a deprecated function on the itertools module* Used when accessing a function on itertools that has been removed in Python 3. This message belongs to the python3 checker. It can't be emitted when using Python >= 3.0. -- Best regards, Paul mailto:pmiscml at gmail.com
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