anything like C++ references?
Erik Max Francis
max at alcyone.com
Tue Jul 15 01:01:08 EDT 2003
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Tue Jul 15 01:01:08 EDT 2003
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Stephen Horne wrote: > The fact that Python has, in this respect, followed the C etc > tradition doesn't mean it is doing the right thing. But in a sense this is tilting at windmills. One could make some high-brow arguments about how these are the wrong choices of symbols for these kinds of operations, but the simple fact is that the computer science community as a whole -- far and wide -- has really grown accustomed to it. Nothing's preventing you from choosing some other choice in your own language (if even those symbols would have relevance! e.g. def/eq vs. =/==), but arguing that Python shouldn't do it because that doesn't match mathematics is an academic (in both senses of the word). It does, there's wide community acceptance of this -- for better or worse -- from a large and exceptionally popular family of languages -- so that isn't going to change. -- Erik Max Francis && max at alcyone.com && http://www.alcyone.com/max/ __ San Jose, CA, USA && 37 20 N 121 53 W && &tSftDotIotE / \ The actor is not quite a human being -- but then, who is? \__/ George Sanders
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