list (range) syntax
Carl Banks
pavlovevidence at gmail.com
Wed Oct 24 22:35:59 EDT 2007
On Oct 24, 6:44 pm, Michal Bozon <boz... at vscht.cz> wrote:
> many Python newcomers are confused why
> range(10), does not include 10.
>
> If there was a proposal for the new
> syntax for ranges, which is known
> e.g. from Pascal or Ruby...
>
> >>> [0..10]
>
> [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]
>
> ...is there a chance to be approved ?
>
> We have had a short discussion on it
> at the irc, I hope that the fact
> that nobody agreed it is a good idea
> was just an accident :)
No, sorry, it's just not going to happen.
In fact, the opposite is happening. Python is removing the few cases
that use a closed interval. For example, random.randint(a,b), which
returned a random integer in range a to b inclusive, was deprecated in
favor of random.randrange(a,b), which generates a random integer in
range a to b, not inclusive.
The advantages of open ranges are especially apparent to someone like
me, who uses Python at home, then has to go to work and Matlab. It's
not that I accidentally use open intervals a lot (I've gotten into the
habit of making sure I am using closed intervals whenever my tension
level is high :), but all the extra "+1"s and "-1"s that I need when
splicing arrays gets pretty old.
Carl Banks
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