Re: Lprint = ( Lisp-style printing ( of lists and strings (etc.) ) in Python )

2024-06-01 Thread Peter J. Holzer via Python-list
On 2024-05-30 21:47:14 -0700, HenHanna via Python-list wrote:
> [('the', 36225), ('and', 17551), ('of', 16759), ('i', 16696), ('a', 15816),
> ('to', 15722), ('that', 11252), ('in', 10743), ('it', 10687)]
> 
> ((the 36225) (and 17551) (of 16759) (i 16696) (a 15816) (to 15722) (that
> 11252) (in 10743) (it 10687))
> 
> 
> i think the latter is easier-to-read, so i use this code
>(by Peter Norvig)

This doesn't work well if your strings contain spaces:

Lprint(
[
["Just", "three", "words"],
["Just", "three words"],
["Just three", "words"],
["Just three words"],
]
)

prints:

((Just three words) (Just three words) (Just three words) (Just three words))

Output is often a compromise between readability and precision.


> def lispstr(exp):
># "Convert a Python object back into a Lisp-readable string."
> if isinstance(exp, list):

This won't work for your example, since you have a list of tuples, not a
list of lists and a tuple is not an instance of a list.

> return '(' + ' '.join(map(lispstr, exp)) + ')'
> else:
> return str(exp)
> 
> def Lprint(x): print(lispstr(x))

I like to use pprint, but it's lacking support for user-defined types. I
should be able to add a method (maybe __pprint__?) to my classes which
handle proper formatting (with line breaks and indentation).

hp
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   _  | Peter J. Holzer| Story must make more sense than reality.
|_|_) ||
| |   | h...@hjp.at |-- Charles Stross, "Creative writing
__/   | http://www.hjp.at/ |   challenge!"


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Lprint = ( Lisp-style printing ( of lists and strings (etc.) ) in Python )

2024-05-31 Thread HenHanna via Python-list



 ;;;  Pls tell me about little tricks you use in Python or Lisp.


[('the', 36225), ('and', 17551), ('of', 16759), ('i', 16696), ('a', 
15816), ('to', 15722), ('that', 11252), ('in', 10743), ('it', 10687)]


((the 36225) (and 17551) (of 16759) (i 16696) (a 15816) (to 15722) (that 
11252) (in 10743) (it 10687))



i think the latter is easier-to-read, so i use this code
   (by Peter Norvig)

def lispstr(exp):
   # "Convert a Python object back into a Lisp-readable string."
if isinstance(exp, list):
return '(' + ' '.join(map(lispstr, exp)) + ')'
else:
return str(exp)

def Lprint(x): print(lispstr(x))
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