Jonathan Fine wrote:
Hi
We can call a function fn using
val = fn(*args, **kwargs)
I'm looking for a good name for the pair (args, kwargs). Any suggestions?
Here's my use case:
def doit(fn , wibble, expect):
args, kwargs = wibble
actual = fn(*args, **kwargs)
if
In article ,
Tim Chase wrote:
>Jonathan Fine wrote:
>>
>> We can call a function fn using
>> val = fn(*args, **kwargs)
>>
>> I'm looking for a good name for the pair (args, kwargs). Any suggestions?
>>
>> For now I'll use argpair, but if anyone has a better idea, I'll use it.
>
>In the le
Jonathan Fine wrote:
> Hi
>
> We can call a function fn using
> val = fn(*args, **kwargs)
>
> I'm looking for a good name for the pair (args, kwargs). Any suggestions?
>
> Here's my use case:
> def doit(fn , wibble, expect):
> args, kwargs = wibble
> actual = fn(*args, *
Jonathan Fine writes:
> I'm looking for a good name for the pair (args, kwargs). Any suggestions?
>
> Here's my use case:
> def doit(fn , wibble, expect):
> args, kwargs = wibble
> actual = fn(*args, **kwargs)
I think this may have been broken in 3.x, but in 2.6 the compiler
Jonathan Fine wrote:
We can call a function fn using
val = fn(*args, **kwargs)
I'm looking for a good name for the pair (args, kwargs). Any suggestions?
For now I'll use argpair, but if anyone has a better idea, I'll use it.
In the legacy of C and Java (okay, that doesn't carry _much_
Hi
We can call a function fn using
val = fn(*args, **kwargs)
I'm looking for a good name for the pair (args, kwargs). Any suggestions?
Here's my use case:
def doit(fn , wibble, expect):
args, kwargs = wibble
actual = fn(*args, **kwargs)
if actual != expect: