Message356204
| Author | Marco Sulla |
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| Recipients | Marco Sulla, gregory.p.smith, josh.r, mbussonn, methane, pablogsal, remi.lapeyre, rhettinger, serhiy.storchaka, steven.daprano |
| Date | 2019-11-07.17:48:33 |
| SpamBayes Score | -1.0 |
| Marked as misclassified | Yes |
| Message-id | <1573148913.53.0.872702592291.issue36906@roundup.psfhosted.org> |
| In-reply-to |
| Content | |
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When Python started to emulate the other languages? Who cares about what other languages do? Python uses `raise` instead of `throw`, even if `throw` is much more popular in the most used languages, only because `raise` in English has more sense. And IMHO a newbie that see a multi-string in the code does not read the documentation. It's evident that is a multi-string. And it expects that it acts as in English or any other written language, that is the text is *that* one that (s)he read. On the contrary, if (s)he reads d""" Marco Sulla """ maybe (s)he thinks "this must be something different", and read the docs. |
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| History | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Date | User | Action | Args |
| 2019-11-07 17:48:33 | Marco Sulla | set | recipients: + Marco Sulla, rhettinger, gregory.p.smith, steven.daprano, methane, serhiy.storchaka, josh.r, mbussonn, pablogsal, remi.lapeyre |
| 2019-11-07 17:48:33 | Marco Sulla | set | messageid: <1573148913.53.0.872702592291.issue36906@roundup.psfhosted.org> |
| 2019-11-07 17:48:33 | Marco Sulla | link | issue36906 messages |
| 2019-11-07 17:48:33 | Marco Sulla | create | |