[Edu-sig] RE: Long Boolean expressions
John Posner
jjp@connix.com
Tue, 6 Jun 2000 13:00:50 -0400
Hi, Gordon --
I agree with your analysis almost completely. I was aiming my implementation
at the person who is (1) learning computer programming and (2) learning
Python.
My one (slight) objection is your wanting to change:
* the comparison operation "> 0", which is firmly in the numerical realm
* to the comparison operation "!= 0", which is more in the logical realm
("not equal to FALSE")
But again, I have pedagogy in mind, not "Boolean purity". :-)
-John
--
John Posner, Editor jjp@oreilly.com
O'Reilly & Associates 860-663-3147
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I can't say that I agree. First of all, this is not a quirk of
Python, this is a feature. It is also present in many, many other
programming languages. Secondly, this is a style widely used by
Python hackers and other end-users (of Python, not of Python
scripts), so while the long form might be appropriate in the context
of learning Python syntax, it is not during application, except, of
course, by end-users who are having difficulty with the more concise
formation. Thus, using the long form only hurts others by not
forcing them to learn the style that they are going to encounter when
reading other people's code. Finally, while the '> 0' bit part works
in this situation, it is not very robust since any, to quote,
"non-zero/non-empty" is true. Thus, '!= 0' should be used instead of
'> 0', so that this long form will work in all situations.
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--
John Posner, Editor jjp@oreilly.com
O'Reilly & Associates 860-663-3147