Yeah I did say it was a strawman :)
On Tue, Sep 20, 2016 at 11:17 AM Chris Angelico
On Tue, Sep 20, 2016 at 6:09 PM, אלעזר
wrote: I meant something like making it a "__bind__" (just a strawman suggestion) and do the same lookup as foo() does, and using a (wrong) functional-programming-inspired syntax
foo 5 ()
Such a syntax will have the side benefit of allowing calling print in a similar way to Python2, which people seem to love.
print "hello" ()
Python has a rule that syntax shouldn't look like grit on Tim's screen. In this case, it looks like the *absence of* grit, which is even worse :) You're giving meaning to the abuttal of two tokens, the first of which must be callable but the second can be anything. And it creates the scary situation of giving valid-but-useless meaning to something all too common in Py2 code:
print "hello"
This would now create a function that, if called, would print "hello", but then abandons it without a second thought. So it'd work in 2.7, fail with an opaque error in 3.3, fail with a more informative error in 3.5, and silently do nothing in 3.7. No thank you! :)
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