On Feb 15, 2006, at 9:51 AM, Barry Warsaw wrote:
On Wed, 2006-02-15 at 09:17 -0800, Guido van Rossum wrote:
Regarding open vs. opentext, I'm still not sure. I don't want to generalize from the openbytes precedent to openstr or openunicode (especially since the former is wrong in 2.x and the latter is wrong in 3.0). I'm tempting to hold out for open() since it's most compatible.
If we go with two functions, I'd much rather hang them off of the file type object then add two new builtins. I really do think file.bytes() and file.text() (a.k.a. open.bytes() and open.text()) is better than opentext() or openbytes().
I agree, or, MAL's idea of bytes.open() and unicode.open() is also good. My fondest dream is that we do NOT have an 'open' builtin which has proven to be very error-prone when used in Windows by newbies (as evidenced by beginner errors as seen on c.l.py, the python-help lists, and other venues) -- defaulting 'open' to text is errorprone, defaulting it to binary doesn't seem the greatest idea either, principle "when in doubt, resist the temptation to guess" strongly suggests not having 'open' as a built-in at all. (And namemangling into openthis and openthat seems less Pythonic to me than exploiting namespaces by making structured names, either this.open and that.open or open.this and open.that). IOW, I entirely agree with Barry and Marc Andre. Alex