What exactly is "pass"? What should it be?
Dominic Binks
dbinks at codeaurora.org
Thu Nov 17 22:01:01 EST 2011
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Thu Nov 17 22:01:01 EST 2011
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On 11/17/2011 6:45 PM, Chris Rebert wrote: > On Thu, Nov 17, 2011 at 6:18 PM, John Ladasky<ladasky at my-deja.com> wrote: >> Hi folks, >> >> I'm trying to write tidy, modular code which includes a long-running process. From time to time I MIGHT like to check in on the progress being made by that long-running process, in various ways. Other times, I'll just want to let it run. So I have a section of code which, generally, looks like this: >> >> def _pass(*args): >> pass >> >> def long_running_process(arg1, arg2, arg_etc, report = _pass): >> result1 = do_stuff() >> report(result1) >> result2 = do_some_different_stuff() >> report(result2) >> result3 = do_even_more_stuff() >> report(result3) >> return result3 >> >> This does what I want. When I do not specify a report function, the process simply runs. Typically, when I do supply a report function, it would print something to stdout, or draw an update through a GUI. >> >> But this approach seems a tad cumbersome and unPythonic to me, particularly the part where I define the function _pass() which accepts an arbitrary argument list, and does nothing but... pass. > > Seems fine to me (good use of the null object pattern), although I > might define _pass() to instead take exactly 1 argument, since that's > all you ever call report() with in your example. > >> This has led me to ask the question, what exactly IS pass? I played with the interpreter a bit. >> >> IDLE 2.6.6 ==== No Subprocess ==== >>>>> pass >>>>> pass() >> SyntaxError: invalid syntax >>>>> type(pass) >> SyntaxError: invalid syntax >> >> So, pass does not appear to be a function, nor even an object. Is it nothing more than a key word? > It is a keyword that can appear in a position where a statement is required by the grammar but there is nothing to do. For example if .. then .. else .. where nothing happens in the else condition is effectively: if <condition>: <then-part> else: pass Bourne shell has a similar construct with the colon statement : Another python example is where you need to catch an exception (or all exceptions but don't actually care about what they are) try: <european swallows> except: pass > Correct: > http://docs.python.org/reference/simple_stmts.html#pass > http://docs.python.org/reference/lexical_analysis.html#keywords > > Cheers, > Chris -- Dominic Binks: dbinks at codeaurora.org Employee of Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum
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