With all the async for and async with and __aiter__ and all that we're getting for async functions, I wonder if we'll ever get __aadd__ and async +. Because hey, maybe you want to yield halfway through an addition.
I wonder what's the percentage of Python code in the whole world, ranked by skill level of the author. How many LOCs from ten year veterans are there, compared to LOCs from 24 hour greenhorns
If the base of the skill pyramid is real wide, then I'd expect prints to still dwarf asserts even if they're pretty spare in mature code bases
Except in 3.4.0 and 3.4.1, I think. It was undocumented and taken out, then put back in for backward compatibility. It's technically documented now, because the docs now talk about how the behavior was taken out and put back in.
@Kevin I suppose that depends on what's in the "mature code base" - when I've been writing something so far, my final version generally has very few print statements, but the iterations that came before have many more. So even the more mature codebases might have a bunch from early iterations?
How do you write Big O notation for things that things that loop inside of a loop but unrelated. Like loop through ['hi', 'bye', 'yes', 'no']. In the loop word.split('').sort().join()... That inner looping loops also but not through the original array.. Loops with split, sort and join. etc.
(security requirements at work are improving, which is a good thing. I'm sure del var satisfies, but if I can be more secure for reasonably little effort, I'm always a fan)
@WayneWerner Take a look at Memory Management. It's mostly for people who are writing C extensions or embedding the interpreter, but it does have useful info about how Python's memory management works, and the concept of memory arenas.
I've been trying to figure out off-and-on for days why a certain number was showing up as 28 in my C++ code and 23 in my Python code (breaking the Python). It turns out to be because a certain setup string was basically 101,59,ABCCOMMAND_DEFAULT,60,200726 in the C++ and 101,59,"ABCCOMMAND_DEFAULT",60,200726 in the Python. The latter isn't correctly parsed by the receiver, and corrupts the data flow.