in c# single quotes are for chars only, while double quotes are strings... I have a nasty habit of hitting single quotes, to the point where I'm on the verge of writing a plugin that converts my ' into " when I'm coding c# ... :\
@AndrasDeak I actually enjoy coding in c, the uniqueness of memory management was fun :D Though all my c knowledge has been slowly fading away :\ all I remember is alloc and malloc :D
AFAIK class attributes are always ordered. But then again, you might lose the order if you instantiate it like SimpleNamespace(a=1, b=2); that depends on how exactly it's implemented
Looks like even if the rough implementation from the docs were an exact implementation, it'd only be reliable in python 3.6+
If you create a subclass and list all the attributes there, the order is maintained. But if you pass kwargs to the SimpleNamespace constructor, you lose the order
there was a PEP to make **kwargs be order preserving
and the PEP was satisfied by taking the compact dict implementation from the pypy guys
that also got cpython a faster and more memory efficient dict, as a bonus
but it wasn't like, dicts are ordered to make kwargs maintain order, more like, kwargs now maintain order (and oh yeah, dicts are ordered, but shhhhh....)
it was kind of an embarrassment to python that OrderedDict(k1=1, k2=2) could return a dict ordered the wrong way..... :D
Keywords have to be strings
>>> def foo(**kwargs):
... pass
...
>>> foo(**{0:0})
TypeError: foo() keywords must be strings
But by some black magic, namespaces are able to bypass that
>>> from types import SimpleNamespace
>>> SimpleNamespace(**{0:0})
namespace()
Why? And how? Could yo...
maybe I should. I'd probably have more success with it now. I still remember how I "overloaded" a function by making a copy of it and renaming its parameter, with the reasoning "this function only works for things called entities, not rockets"