Aahz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, > Alex Martelli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > >the canonical idiom when you need such distinction is: > > > >_not_there = object() > >def foo(bar=_not_there, baz=_not_there, bap=_not_there): > > if bar is _not_there: ... > > > >Other unique objects can be substituted for the 'sentinel', but I prefer > >an empty "object()" because it has no other possible meaning except that > >of a distinguishable, identifiable sentinel. IOW, you could set the > >_not_there name to [] or {} or many other things, but that could be > >slightly confusing for the reader (since the other things might have > >other meanings and purposes) while 'object()' shouldn't be. > > What's your preferred idiom when you're dealing with storable objects?
What's a "storable object"? You mean, something that can be pickled, or passed to the .write method of a file object, or stored in a database, or what else? Alex -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list