On Sun, Apr 22, 2007, Steven Bethard wrote:
On 4/22/07, Christian Heimes
wrote: I'm proposing the following changes:
* sys.main is added which contains the dotted name of the main script. This allows code like:
if __name__ == sys.main: ...
Note that this really requires the code::
import sys if __name__ == sys.main:
The import statement matters to me because 77% of my modules that use the __main__ idiom *don't* import sys. Hence, for those modules, this new idiom introduces more boilerplate.
Does this follow the axiom that 83% of all statistics are made up on the spot? ;-) Seriously, if I'm writing a script that requires __main__, chances are excellent that it already includes sys (because it's probably a command-line script that's graduating to module status). -- Aahz (aahz@pythoncraft.com) <*> http://www.pythoncraft.com/ "...string iteration isn't about treating strings as sequences of strings, it's about treating strings as sequences of characters. The fact that characters are also strings is the reason we have problems, but characters are strings for other good reasons." --Aahz