Behavior of the for-else construct
Schachner, Joseph
Joseph.Schachner at Teledyne.com
Mon Mar 7 13:07:42 EST 2022
Can someone please change the topic of this thread? No longer about for-else.
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-----Original Message-----
From: Dennis Lee Bieber <wlfraed at ix.netcom.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 6, 2022 1:29 PM
To: python-list at python.org
Subject: Re: Behavior of the for-else construct
On Sun, 6 Mar 2022 17:39:51 +0100, "Peter J. Holzer" <hjp-python at hjp.at> declaimed the following:
>
>(* *) for comments was actually pretty commonly used - maybe because it
>stands out more than { }. I don't know if I've ever seen (. .) instead
>of [ ].
>
Or some terminals provided [ ] but not { } <G>
Modula-2 appears to have fixed on (* *) for comments, and only [ ] for indexing.
Consider the potential mayhem going from a language where { } are comment delimiters to one where they are block delimiters <G>
>C also has alternative rerpresentations for characters not in the
>common subset of ISO-646 and EBCDIC. However, the trigraphs are
>extremely ugly (e.g ??< ??> instead of { }). I have seen them used (on
>an IBM/390 system with an EBCDIC variant without curly braces) and it's
>really no fun to read that.
>
My college mainframe used EBCDIC, but the available languages did not include C or Pascal. We had APL, FORTRAN-IV (in full separate compilation form, and FLAG [FORTRAN Load and Go] which was a "all in one file, compile & run" used by first year students), COBOL (74?), BASIC, SNOBOL, Meta-Symbol and AP (both assemblers, though Meta-Symbol could, provided the proper definition file, generate absolute binary code for pretty much any processor), and something called SL-1 (Simulation Language-1, which produced FORTRAN output for discrete event models).
UCSD Pascal, and PDP-11 assembly were run on a pair of LSI-11 systems.
Assembly used for the operating system principles course.
I didn't encounter "real" C until getting a TRS-80 (first as integer LC, then Pro-MC), along with Supersoft LISP (on cassette tape!). (I had books for C and Ada before encountering compilers for them)
--
Wulfraed Dennis Lee Bieber AF6VN
wlfraed at ix.netcom.com http://wlfraed.microdiversity.freeddns.org/
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