changing to function what works like a function

Westley Martínez anikom15 at gmail.com
Mon Mar 7 09:36:27 EST 2011


On Mon, 2011-03-07 at 03:33 -0800, Victor Paraschiv wrote:
> Hi everyone
> i understood that the goal of Python is to make programing easy (of
> course, powerful at the same time).
> I think one way to do it is to eliminate unnecessary syntax
> exceptions. One is the following:
> for a complex number "z", to get the real and imaginary  part, you
> type:  "z.real" and "z.imag". 
> At the same time, the most obvious way would be to call it like a
> function, say: "real(z)", and, respectively, "imag(z)". Just like it
> was changed from " print 'something' " , to " print('something') " .
> 
> What do you think? There are more examples like this.
> 
> 
> 
No. The real and imaginary parts of a number represented as attributes
makes a lot of sense.




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