Jesse Rosenthal writes:
> python3 doesn't allow dictionaries to be initialized with non-string
> keywords. This presents problems on systems in which "python" means
> "python3". We instead initalize the dictionary using the dict
> comprehension and then update it with the values from the tree. Th
Jesse Rosenthal writes:
> python3 doesn't allow dictionaries to be initialized with non-string
> keywords. This presents problems on systems in which "python" means
> "python3". We instead initalize the dictionary using the dict
> comprehension and then update it with the values from the tree. Th
On Fri, Oct 31 2014, "W. Trevor King" wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 01:33:25PM -0400, Jesse Rosenthal wrote:
>> We instead initalize the dictionary using the dict comprehension and
>> then update it with the values from the tree. This will work with
>> both python2 and python3.
>
> Dict compre
On Fri, Oct 31 2014, "W. Trevor King" wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 01:33:25PM -0400, Jesse Rosenthal wrote:
>> We instead initalize the dictionary using the dict comprehension and
>> then update it with the values from the tree. This will work with
>> both python2 and python3.
>
> Dict compre
"W. Trevor King" writes:
> On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 01:33:25PM -0400, Jesse Rosenthal wrote:
>> We instead initalize the dictionary using the dict comprehension and
>> then update it with the values from the tree. This will work with
>> both python2 and python3.
>
> Dict comprehensions are new in
python3 doesn't allow dictionaries to be initialized with non-string
keywords. This presents problems on systems in which "python" means
"python3". We instead initalize the dictionary using the dict
comprehension and then update it with the values from the tree. This
will work with both python2 and
"W. Trevor King" writes:
> On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 01:33:25PM -0400, Jesse Rosenthal wrote:
>> We instead initalize the dictionary using the dict comprehension and
>> then update it with the values from the tree. This will work with
>> both python2 and python3.
>
> Dict comprehensions are new in
On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 02:04:50PM -0400, Jesse Rosenthal wrote:
> W. Trevor King writes:
> > On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 01:33:25PM -0400, Jesse Rosenthal wrote:
> >> We instead initalize the dictionary using the dict comprehension
> >> and then update it with the values from the tree. This will work
On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 02:04:50PM -0400, Jesse Rosenthal wrote:
> W. Trevor King writes:
> > On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 01:33:25PM -0400, Jesse Rosenthal wrote:
> >> We instead initalize the dictionary using the dict comprehension
> >> and then update it with the values from the tree. This will work
On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 01:33:25PM -0400, Jesse Rosenthal wrote:
> We instead initalize the dictionary using the dict comprehension and
> then update it with the values from the tree. This will work with
> both python2 and python3.
Dict comprehensions are new in 2.7 [1,2], so this drops support fo
On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 01:33:25PM -0400, Jesse Rosenthal wrote:
> We instead initalize the dictionary using the dict comprehension and
> then update it with the values from the tree. This will work with
> both python2 and python3.
Dict comprehensions are new in 2.7 [1,2], so this drops support fo
python3 doesn't allow dictionaries to be initialized with non-string
keywords. This presents problems on systems in which "python" means
"python3". We instead initalize the dictionary using the dict
comprehension and then update it with the values from the tree. This
will work with both python2 and
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