Why can't I xor strings?
Stephen Waterbury
golux at comcast.net
Sat Oct 9 18:26:57 EDT 2004
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Sat Oct 9 18:26:57 EDT 2004
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David Bolen wrote: > Grant Edwards <grante at visi.com> writes: >>On 2004-10-09, Jeremy Bowers <jerf at jerf.org> wrote: >>> >>>The basic problem is that there is no obvious "xor on string" operation >> >>Sure there is. Strings have a boolean value, and the xor >>operation on boolean values is well-defined. > > That's an operation, but I'm not sure that's the obvious one. For my > part, if I saw "string1 ^ string2" I'd probably expect a byte by byte > xor with the result being a new string. ... but you'd get a traceback. ;) As pointed out earlier in this thread, what works is "bool(string1) ^ bool(string2)", which certainly doesn't violate the law of least astonishment. Why would anything else be needed?
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