On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 1:01 AM, Lucas Malor <7vsfeu4pxg@snkmail.com> wrote:
for i in range(5): print(i, end=' => ') case = Case(i) if case(1): print('one') elif case((2,3)):
print('tuple(two, three)')
elif case(2, 3): print('two or three') elif case > 3: print('more than three')
else:
print('unmatched')
Ok, but you have to nest it inside a for loop. Your class is a good solution, but a new syntax does not need nesting in a with or a for statement.
I don't think he *has* to nest it. My reading of the above is that it's the For-Case Paradigm [1], normally considered an anti-pattern but viable for demonstrating what happens in each case. ChrisA [1] http://thedailywtf.com/Articles/The_FOR-CASE_paradigm.aspx