(test) ? a:b
BartC
bc at freeuk.com
Wed Oct 22 14:08:40 EDT 2014
More information about the Python-list mailing list
Wed Oct 22 14:08:40 EDT 2014
- Previous message (by thread): (test) ? a:b
- Next message (by thread): (test) ? a:b
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
"Rustom Mody" <rustompmody at gmail.com> wrote in message news:7d2ea3c1-504e-4f5c-8338-501b1483df38 at googlegroups.com... > On Wednesday, October 22, 2014 5:01:08 PM UTC+5:30, Ned Batchelder wrote: >> On 10/22/14 5:05 AM, buscacio wrote: >> > Em quarta-feira, 22 de outubro de 2014 06h29min55s UTC-2, ast >> > escreveu: >> >> Hello >> >> Is there in Python something like: >> >> j = (j >= 10) ? 3 : j+1; >> >> as in C language ? >> >> thx >> > without not: >> > j = [j+1, 3][j>=10] >> > with not: >> > j = [3, j+1][not (j>=10)] > >> Why on earth would you recommend this outdated hack, when there's a true >> conditional operator? > > > To learn a bit about the interchangeability of control and data > structures? > > [Just playing devil's advocate] But it doesn't do the same thing. Comparing: x = cond ? f() : g(); # C version with x = [f(), g()] [cond] the latter evaluates both f() and g() instead of just one. Apart from being inefficient, it can have unintended side-effects. -- Bartc
- Previous message (by thread): (test) ? a:b
- Next message (by thread): (test) ? a:b
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the Python-list mailing list