On 10/16/2009 8:16 PM, Terry Reedy wrote:
The fact that two or three people who agree on something agree on the thing that they agree on confirms nothing. One could just as well argue that summing anything but numbers is semantically incoherent, not correct. Certainly, my dictionary points in that direction.
Come on now, that is just a silly argument. And dictionaries are obviously irrelevant; that is a sophomoric (literally) argument. Of course the numbers do not matter. The *reasons* matter. And by citing Tim and Peter, I was pointing to their quite specific *reasons*. The only serious reason that has been offered for the current behavior is that people who do not know better will sum strings instead of joining them, which is more efficient. That is a pretty weak argument for breaking expectations and so refusing to do duck typing that an error is raise. Especially in a language like Python. (As Tim and Peter make clear.) Alan -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list