On Tue, 7 May 2024 at 03:42, jak via Python-list wrote:
>
> Loris Bennett ha scritto:
> > r...@zedat.fu-berlin.de (Stefan Ram) writes:
> >
> >>Me (indented by 2) and the chatbot (flush left). Lines lengths > 72!
> >
> > Is there a name for this kind of indentation, i.e. the stuff you are
> > w
Loris Bennett ha scritto:
r...@zedat.fu-berlin.de (Stefan Ram) writes:
Me (indented by 2) and the chatbot (flush left). Lines lengths > 72!
Is there a name for this kind of indentation, i.e. the stuff you are
writing not being flush left? It is sort of contrary to
what I think of as "norm
Stefan Ram ha scritto:
r...@zedat.fu-berlin.de (Stefan Ram) wrote or quoted:
translation services are gonna interpret line breaks as
I just beefed up my posting program to replace "gonna".
Now I won't come across like some street thug, but rather
as a respectable member of human soci
On 2024-05-02 16:34:38 +0200, Loris Bennett via Python-list wrote:
> r...@zedat.fu-berlin.de (Stefan Ram) writes:
> > Me (indented by 2) and the chatbot (flush left). Lines lengths > 72!
>
> Is there a name for this kind of indentation, i.e. the stuff you are
> writing not being flush left?
Ram
Lawrence D'Oliveiro writes:
> Assume you have an expression "s.replace('a','b').replace('c','d').
> replace('e','f').replace('g','h')". Its value is a string which
> is the value of s, but with "a" replaced by "b", "c" replaced by
> "d", "e" replaced by "f" and "g" replaced by "h". Ho
r...@zedat.fu-berlin.de (Stefan Ram) writes:
> Me (indented by 2) and the chatbot (flush left). Lines lengths > 72!
Is there a name for this kind of indentation, i.e. the stuff you are
writing not being flush left? It is sort of contrary to
what I think of as "normal" indentation. You seem to