PEP suggestion: Uniform way to indicate Python language version
Steve D'Aprano
steve+python at pearwood.info
Fri Sep 9 21:33:11 EDT 2016
On Tue, 23 Aug 2016 12:29 am, Random832 wrote:
> Receiving a SyntaxError or whatever other exception, which provides no
> suggestion about how to actually fix the issue (install a later version
> of python / run with "python3" instead of "python"), is a bad user
> experience.
Er wot?
If I run the following code in Python 3.4:
x:int = spam.method(?) - 1
how is the 3.4 interpreter supposed to know when the x:int and the (?)
syntax were introduced? I can tell you when x:int is introduced (Python
3.6) but I have no idea when (?) will be introduced, or what it will mean.
> It will continue to be a bad user experience when people are
> using features that only work on python 5.0 and later and other people
> are trying to run their scripts under python 4.0,
Suppose that version 4.5 introduces |: syntax and version 4.8 removes it
again because it was a terrible idea. And 4.9 introduces unless
expressions. I write this:
x = spam |: eggs unless ValueError then cheese
What syntax error should Python 4.0 give?
--
Steve
“Cheer up,” they said, “things could be worse.” So I cheered up, and sure
enough, things got worse.
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