Pythonic/idiomatic?
Jean-Michel Pichavant
jeanmichel at sequans.com
Tue Nov 9 08:31:59 EST 2010
Seebs wrote:
> I have an existing hunk of Makefile code:
> CPPFLAGS = "$(filter -D* -I* -i* -U*,$(TARGET_CFLAGS))"
> For those not familiar with GNU makeisms, this means "assemble a string
> which consists of all the words in $(TARGET_CFLAGS) which start with one
> of -D, -I, -i, or -U". So if you give it
> foo -Ibar baz
> it'll say
> -Ibar
>
> I have a similar situation in a Python context, and I am wondering
> whether this is an idiomatic spelling:
>
> ' '.join([x for x in target_cflags.split() if re.match('^-[DIiU]', x)])
>
> This appears to do the same thing, but is it an idiomatic use of list
> comprehensions, or should I be breaking it out into more bits?
>
> You will note that of course, I have carefully made it a one-liner so I
> don't have to worry about indentation*.
>
> -s
> [*] Kidding, I just thought this seemed like a pretty clear expression.
>
One pythonic way to do it, is to use an option parser.
optparse (or argparse if python > 2.7)
JM
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