On Tue, Dec 14, 2021 at 06:48:57PM -0800, Paul Bryan wrote:
> Interesting. Some apparent downsides:
>
> - doesn't apply to class attributes
There is that.
> - objects with `__slots__` can't dynamically add attributes
Just give it a `__dict__` slot:
__slots__ = {'__dict__': None}
and now
On Tue, Dec 14, 2021, 9:49 PM Paul Bryan wrote:
> Interesting. Some apparent downsides:
>
> - doesn't apply to class attributes
> - objects with `__slots__` can't dynamically add attributes
>
Also doesn't apply to module level members.
To my mind these are significant downsides. And it also rep
Interesting. Some apparent downsides:
- doesn't apply to class attributes
- objects with `__slots__` can't dynamically add attributes
On Wed, 2021-12-15 at 11:13 +1100, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> Hmmm, well it seems that we already have support for class attribute
> docstrings, since Python 3.8.
Hmmm, well it seems that we already have support for class attribute
docstrings, since Python 3.8.
It's not documented, but soon will be.
https://bugs.python.org/issue46076
class Card:
"""A card from a standard French deck"""
__slots__ = {
'suit': 'Either "Spades", "He
On Tue, Dec 14, 2021 at 03:46:06PM -, a.kolpakov2010--- via Python-ideas
wrote:
> It would be awesome to be able to create a list with just:
>
> li = [1—100]
[1-100] already has a meaning in Python: it computes 1-100 = -99 and
puts it in a list.
> or
>
> li = [1 .. 100]
Is that an open,
On 2021-12-14 15:46:06, a.kolpakov2010--- via Python-ideas wrote:
> It would be awesome to be able to create a list with just:
>
> li = [1—100]
>
> or
>
> li = [1 .. 100]
What's wrong with
> range(1, 100)
Do you really want a list only to use in a for loop? What's wrong with
the iterator?
__
list(range(1, 101))
I think we don't need a whole new syntax for something that's already an
easy one-liner.
--
Finn (Mobile)
On Tue, Dec 14, 2021, 8:52 AM a.kolpakov2010--- via Python-ideas <
python-ideas@python.org> wrote:
> It would be awesome to be able to create a list with just:
>
> li =
Seems like a lot of work to just make
list(range(1,100))
Insignificantly easier to write
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Hey all:
There is discussion RIGHT NOW in the SC, and on python-dev about future
"policy" around annotations, in response to the PEP 563 and 649 -- not
clear where it's going to end up, but it is clear that the whole "are
annotations only for typing" question will be made more clear.
Anyway, I ha
On Tue, Dec 14, 2021 at 10:23 AM Joao S. O. Bueno
wrote:
> Just a short one, for everyone agreeing type.Annotated does the job,
> but thinks we need new syntax, because it is verbose:
>
> You can already do:
>
> from typing import Annotated as A
>
> And:
>
> attr: A[type, "docstring goes here
It would be awesome to be able to create a list with just:
li = [1—100]
or
li = [1 .. 100]
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Just a short one, for everyone agreeing type.Annotated does the job,
but thinks we need new syntax, because it is verbose:
You can already do:
from typing import Annotated as A
And:
attr: A[type, "docstring goes here"]
I see no need for any new syntax.
(and maybe adding typing.Docstring f
On Tue, Dec 14, 2021 at 12:38:55AM +0900, Stephen J. Turnbull wrote:
> Steven D'Aprano writes:
> > On Sun, Dec 12, 2021 at 08:44:25PM -0500, Ricky Teachey wrote:
>
> > > class C:
> > > x: Annotated [Any, "spam"]
> > >
> > > help(C.x)
> >
> > > And it seems reasonable to try and create
On Mon, Dec 13, 2021 at 05:10:52PM -0800, Paul Bryan wrote:
> In other words, strings would be reserved to specify documentation.
We can't reserve strings to specify documentation.
(1) Strings can be used for forward references.
class Node:
payload: Any # Arbitrary data.
ne
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