On 1/13/2014 12:09 PM, Guido van Rossum wrote:
Yeah, the %s behavior with a string argument was a messy attempt at
compromise. I was hoping to mimick a common use of %s in Python 2,
where it can be used with either an 8-bit string or a number as
argument, acting like %b in the former case and like %d in the latter
case. Not having %s at all in Python 3 means that porting requires
more thinking (== more opportunity for mistakes when you're converting
in bulk) and there's no easy way to write code that works in Python 2
and 3.

If we have %b for strictly interpolating bytes, I'm fine with adding
%a for calling ascii() on the argument and then interpolating the
result after ASCII-encoding it.

If somehow (unlikely though it seems) we end up keeping %s (e.g.
strictly to ease porting), we could also keep %r as an alias for %a.

%s for strictly interpolating bytes eases porting. Sad name, but good for compatibility. When the blowup happens, due to having a str type passed, the porter adds the appropriate .encode(...) to the parameter, so it doesn't blow up on Py 3, and it'll be OK for Py 2 as well, will it not?
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