On 26.06.2018 0:13, Steve Holden wrote:
On Mon, Jun 25, 2018 at 8:37 PM, Terry Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> wrote:
On 6/24/2018 7:25 PM, Guido van Rossum wrote:
I'd wager that the people who might be most horrified about it

the (b) scoping rule change

would be people who feel strongly that the change to the
comprehension scope rules in Python 3 is a big improvement,

I might not be one of those 'most horrified' by (b), but I increasingly don't like it, and I was at best -0 on the comprehension scope change. To me, iteration variable assignment in the current scope is a non-problem.  So to me the change was mostly useless churn.  Little benefit, little harm.  And not worth fighting when others saw a benefit.

However, having made the change to nested scopes, I think we should stick with them.  Or repeal them.  (I believe there is another way to isolate iteration names -- see  below).  To me, (b) amounts to half repealing the nested scope change, making comprehensions half-fowl, half-fish chimeras.
​[...]​
 
--
Terry Jan Reedy

​I'd like to ask: how many readers of ​
 
​this email have ever deliberately taken advantage of the limited Python 3 scope in comprehensions and generator expressions to use what would otherwise be a conflicting local variable name?​

I did:

for l in (l.rstrip() for l in f):

The provisional unstripped line variable is totally unneeded in the following code.


I appreciate that the scope limitation can sidestep accidental naming errors, which is a good thing.

Unfortunately, unless we anticipate Python 4 (or whatever) also making for loops have an implicit scope, I am left wondering whether it's not too large a price to pay. After all, special cases aren't special enough to break the rules, and unless the language is headed towards implicit scope for all uses of "for" one could argue that the scope limitation is a special case too far. It certainly threatens to be yet another confusion for learners, and while that isn't the only consideration, it should be given due weight.


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-- 
Regards,
Ivan