Guido rethinking removal of cmp from sort method
Chris Angelico
rosuav at gmail.com
Sat Apr 2 02:17:43 EDT 2011
On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 4:17 PM, harrismh777 <harrismh777 at charter.net> wrote:
> Chris Angelico wrote:
>>
>> Why this lengthy discussion on whether Python is object-oriented or
>> not? What difference does it make?
>
> Great question... glad you asked...!
>
>> But bad things sometimes have to happen. And that's why things are
>> versioned.
>
> You didn't read the post... cmp removal is a bad thing, and it does not
> need to, and should not have to happen.
I agree that removal of a feature like that is a bad thing. But the
whole point of this thread is the question of whether or not it should
have happened (or rather, whether or not it should be undone).
> Wrong... one of the reasons for OOP in the first place ( OOA&D ) is to
> ensure that BAD THINGS DO NOT HAPPEN. Code reuse and stability are key...
> and OOA&D helps to make sure that works.
So it's perfectly acceptable for bad things to happen in a
non-object-oriented library, but as soon as it works with objects, it
has to eschew badness? This does not make sense.
> You need to read Grady Booch... and study a little OOP design either
> using SmallTalk, or C++, to get an appreciation maybe for what is at stake
> here.
I've been a C++ programmer for nearly twenty years. I think I know a
few things about OOP. Actually, I've done OOP in non-OO languages;
most notably, plain old C. The OS/2 Presentation Manager class
hierarchy (SOM) is primarily implemented in C, for instance. My point
is that "object orientation" is completely separate from
"implementation is separate from interface".
> You may not have enough knowledge to understand what I'm talking about.
> Forgive me.
Maybe I don't. Let me check my character sheet...
Skill, Ranks, Ability, Total modifier
Knowledge (Arcana): 19 + 4 = 23
Knowledge (History): 11 + 4 = 15
Knowledge (Nature): 2 + 4 = 6
Knowledge (The Planes): 0
Not sure where Knowledge (OOP) comes in there. Must ask my DM some day.
Seriously though: I've programmed various systems, where the division
of "interface" and "implementation" come in quite different places; my
favorite being networking, where the interface is the comms protocol,
and everything else is implementation. Objects don't come into it.
But this is getting seriously off-topic; none of this connects with
the cmp= parameter.
Chris Angelico
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