In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, mystilleef wrote: > Maric Michaud wrote: >> But that's not python philosophy. > Python doesn't have any philosophy with regards to naming identifiers.
But the python community has one. Pythonistas prefer readable source code so they tend to think about good names. As The Zen of Python says “Readability counts.” >> But they are in Python and that is the python's philosophy. All attribute or >> method not beginning with an '_' *is* API. > Right, and what if I want to change a private API to a public one. How > does that solve my naming issues. Then you have to change all references to that private attribute. What's the problem here? As it was private I would expect to find all the references "nearby" in the same module or class. >> And in python the reverse can be true : > The reverse is hardly ever true. 90% of public APIs in almost all > languages are methods or functions. Except the ones with properties where ordinary "attributes" may be just calls in disguise. Python is not almost all other languages and in Python code you usually won't find those trivial getters and setters because we have properties if the access might become a bit more complex in the future. Ciao, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list