python for loop
Lou Pecora
pecora at anvil.nrl.navy.mil
Wed Apr 1 09:55:58 EDT 2009
In article <1ej5t4930m29h0f6ttpdcd83t08q2q3sab at 4ax.com>,
Lada Kugis <lada.kugis at gmail.com> wrote:
> On 01 Apr 2009 01:26:41 GMT, Steven D'Aprano
> <steven at REMOVE.THIS.cybersource.com.au> wrote:
>
> >
> >Why Python (and other languages) count from zero instead of one, and
> >why half-open intervals are better than closed intervals:
> >
> >http://www.johndcook.com/blog/2008/06/26/why-computer-scientists-count-from-z
> >ero/
> >http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/EWD/transcriptions/EWD08xx/EWD831.html
>
> steven, thanks for answering,
>
> yes, i saw the second one a little time ago (someone else posted it as
> well in really cute handwriting version :) and the first time just
> now, but the examples which both of them give don't seem to me to be
> that relevant, e.g. the pros don't overcome the cons.
>
> imho, although both sides (mathematical vs engineer) adress some
> points, none of them give the final decisive argument.
> i understand the math. point of view, but from the practical side it
> is not good. it goes nicely into his tidy theory of everything, but
> practical and intuitive it is not. as i said, being an engineer, i
> tend towards the other side, so this is biased opinion (nobody can be
> unbiased) but from a practical side it seems unpractical for
> engineering problems (and to me, the purpose of computers is to help
> humans to build a better world, not to prove theories - theories are
> useless if they don't help us in reality. so we should try to adapt
> computing to real world, not our world to computers).
There is nothing more practical than a good theory.
--- James Clerk Maxwell
You said you came from the C world (besides Fortran). If so, you have
already seen array indexing starting with 0 and going to n-1.
Why, then, should Python be so foreign to you?
--
-- Lou Pecora
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