On 25/07/2019 00:09:37, David Mertz wrote:
I agree with Greg.
There are various possible behaviors that might make sense, but having
`d.values() != d.values()` is about the only one I can see no sense in.
+1
This really feels like a good cade for reading a descriptive
exception. If someone wants too compare `set(d.values())` that's
great. If they want `list(d.values())`, also a sensible question. But
the programmer should spell it explicitly.
So, a helpful error message including something like "Cannot compare
dict.values directly, consider converting to sets / lists / sorted lists
before comparing" ?
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