why not "'in' in 'in'"?
Grant Griffin
not.this at seebelow.org
Thu Jun 13 17:14:58 EDT 2002
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Thu Jun 13 17:14:58 EDT 2002
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In article <mailman.1023989567.18847.python-list at python.org>, "Bjorn says... > ... >Ok, how about: > >>>> class mystr(str): >... def __contains__(self, s): >... return self.find(s) >=3D 0 >... >>>> 'hello' in mystr('hello world') >1 >>>> 'foo' in mystr('hello world') >0 >>>> Well, sure--but where's the fun in that? Actually, I don't much like this approach for a couple of reasons. First, you then have to remember to wrap each string literal inside the name of your new class, a practice which is both tedious and ugly. It isn't worth it. Second, although Python's newfound ability to subclass from built-in types allows one to change nearly anything one doesn't like about the way the type works, I generally think that's going in the wrong direction because it makes your code work different than it reads. Instead, I find the ability to subclass from built-in types to be useful primarily to _add_ behavior to a type. The most common example is some sort of specialized list or dictionary which provides new methods appropriate only for its special use. These cases are, of course, simply a more elegant way of implementing what we used to implement less elegantly via an explicit list member, e.g., "self.list". just-because-guido-allows-it-doesn't-mean-you-should-use -it-injudicious-ly y'rs, =g2 _________________________________________________________________________ Grant R. Griffin g2 at dspguru.com Publisher of dspGuru http://www.dspguru.com Iowegian International Corporation http://www.iowegian.com
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