Annoying octal notation
Ethan Furman
ethan at stoneleaf.us
Thu Aug 27 13:51:16 EDT 2009
MRAB wrote:
> Ethan Furman wrote:
>
>> Steven D'Aprano wrote:
>>
>>> A mistake is still a mistake even if it shared with others.
>>>
>>> Treating its with a lead zero as octal was a design error when it was
>>> first thought up
>>
>>
>> [snippage]
>>
>> I have to disagree with you on this one. The computing world was
>> vastly different when that design decision was made. Space was at a
>> premium, programmers were not touch-typists, every character had to
>> count, and why in the world would somebody who had to use papertape or
>> punch cards add a lead zero without a *real* good reason? I submit
>> that that real good reason was to specify an octal literal, and not a
>> decimal literal.
>>
>> Now many many years have passed, much has changed, and a leading zero
>> (like so much else) no longer makes the sense in once did --
>> especially in a very wide-spread and general purpose language like
>> Python. That does not mean it was not a very good decision at the time.
>>
> I think that it although it might have been reasonable when C was
> invented, it wasn't a good idea when Python was invented.
Very good point. I was thinking Steven was talking about the earliest
case, as opposed to the earliest Python case. My apologies if I
misunderstood.
~Ethan~
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