was: Re: looking for MOP documentation
Michael Hudson
mwh at python.net
Mon Sep 22 08:54:56 EDT 2003
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Mon Sep 22 08:54:56 EDT 2003
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Peter Hansen <peter at engcorp.com> writes: > Michael Hudson wrote: > > Of course, there's a sense in which Common Lisp just doesn't have much > > syntax, but Python's hardly overloaded with it, either. *The objects* > > or to be more precise the *types* of objects themselves are what > > determine really happens, and that's precisely the sort of thing > > metaclasses let you play with. > > I guess this might get down to the question of whether Python is > more about the syntax, grammar, keywords, and such, of the language > or more about the standard types of objects which are provided with > it. In my mind, it's very much the former and very little the > latter, but maybe that's just me. Dicts and lists and integers are > interesting and all, but I'm not sure it's their behaviour which > makes Python Python. Fair enough. I can see your point of view, I just don't (completely) agree with it :-) You could have something with similar syntax, keywords, etc to Python but semantics like C, and it would still be horrible (IMHO). Cheers, mwh -- In case you're not a computer person, I should probably point out that "Real Soon Now" is a technical term meaning "sometime before the heat-death of the universe, maybe". -- Scott Fahlman <sef at cs.cmu.edu>
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