On Sun, May 06, 2018 at 09:33:03PM -0700, Nathaniel Smith wrote:
How is
data_path = __filepath__.parent / "foo.txt"
more distracting than
data_path = joinpath(dirname(__file__), "foo.txt")
Why are you dividing by a string? That's weird. [looks up the pathlib docs] Oh, that's why. It's still weird. So yes, its very distracting. First I have to work out what __filepath__ is, then I have to remember the differences between all the various flavours of pathlib.<whatever>Path and suffer a moment or two of existential dread as I try to work out whether or not *this* specific flavour is the one I need. This might not matter for heavy users of pathlib, but for casual users, it's a big, intimidating API with: - an important conceptual difference between pure paths and concrete paths; - at least six classes; - about 50 or so methods and properties As far as performance goes, I don't think it matters that we could technically make pathlib imported lazily. Many people put all their pathname manipulations at the beginning of their script, so lazy or not, the pathlib module is going to be loaded *just after* startup, . For many scripts, this isn't going to matter, but for those who want to avoid the overhead of pathlib, making it lazy doesn't help. That just delays the overhead, it doesn't remove it. -- Steve