On Aug 4, 2006, at 12:51 PM, Giovanni Bajo wrote: > Paul Colomiets <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> Well it's not recomended to mix strings and unicode in the >> dictionaries >> but if we mix for example integer and float we have the same >> thing. It >> doesn't raise exception but still it is not expected behavior for me: >>>>> d = { 1.0: 10, 2.0: 20 } >> then if i somewhere later do: >>>>> d[1] = 100 >>>>> d[2] = 200 >> to have here all floats in d.keys(). May be this is not a best >> example. > > There is a strong difference. Python is moving towards unifying > number types in > a way (see the true division issue): the idea is that, all in all, > user > shouldn't really care what type a number is, as long as he knows > it's a number. > On the other hand, unicode and str are going to diverge more and more.
Well, not really. True division makes int/int return float instead of an int. You really do have to care if you have an int or a float most of the time, they're very different semantically. Unicode and str are eventually going to be the same thing (str would ideally end up becoming a synonym of unicode). The difference being that there will be some other type to contain bytes. -bob _______________________________________________ Python-Dev mailing list Python-Dev@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com