Here’s the idea: for f-strings, we add a !d conversion operator, which is superficially similar to !s, !r, and !a. The meaning of !d is: produce the text of the expression (not its value!),
I SO WANT THIS AS A GENERAL FEATURE, not just for f-strings, it hurts.
Actually what I want is an executable object (a function?) which has the AST and text of the expression attached. If putting this into f-strings is a first step towards getting this thunk-like thing, then I don't need to read any further, I'm +10000 :-)
Well... this is a trivial expansion of the keyword argument short form proposal you were very strongly opposed ^_- So, I suggested `foo(=a)` as short form for `foo(a=a)`, but if we interpret it instead as `foo(=a)` -> `foo(**{'a': a}`, which is really the same thing for most purposes, then we could trivially get `foo(=1+3*bar)` -> 'foo(**{'1+3*bar': 1+3*bar})' I'm fine with this proposal. And thanks Chris for the idea! / Anders