Oh I see ! On these lines mentioned by you, I can now sense the sense. Thanks.
On Friday, 21 September 2012 11:22:45 UTC+5:30, alex23 wrote: > On Sep 21, 3:34 pm, Vineet <vineet.deod...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > Amongst the python idioms, how the below-mentioned make sense? > > > ## There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it. > > > --- In programming, there can be a number of ways, equally efficient, to do > > certain thing. > > > > This isn't talking about your Python code as much as about Python > > itself. For example, in Python 2.x you can use either `open` or `file` > > to open a file, with `file` being a factory function for creating file > > objects, and `open` using it internally. In Python 3.x, `file` is no > > longer a built-in, as it produced a point of confusion as to which was > > the one obvious way to open a file. > > > > > ## Although never is often better than *right* now. > > > --- How come "never" is better that "right now" ? > > > > It's better to not add a language feature than it is to add it poorly, > > especially when you endeavour to provide backwards compatibility as > > much as possible within major versions. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list