El mar, 12 oct 2021 a las 16:51, Jeremiah Vivian (< nohackingofkrowten@gmail.com>) escribió:
I posted a previous thread about overloading the unary `+` operator in strings with `ord`, and that expanded to more than just the unary `+` operator. So I'm saying now, there should be these implementations:
+string - `int(string, 10)` (or just `int(string)`) -string - `int(string, 8)` ~string - `int(string, 16)`
Or:
+string - `string.lstrip()` -string - `string.rstrip()` ~string - `string.strip()`
If anyone has better ideas, they can post it here.
Your other post mostly attracted sarcastic replies, so I'll be more direct: It's highly unlikely that this will go anywhere. To get a new operator on a builtin type, you'll have to show that: - It's a common operation; - There's no convenient way to do it already; and - The meaning of the operator is reasonably clear to a reader of the code. Recent examples of new features that met that bar are dict | in https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0584 and matrix multiply in https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0465/. I don't think any of these proposals come close to meeting those criteria.
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