Okay, here's my use case. A user has a list of credit cards. I want to generate x number of randomized credit card objects and append them to my user's credit_cards list
I've been a bit worried for using things like [plt.close(k) for k in range(10)], somehow it felt bad to use a list comprehension which doesn't actually construct something
But sometimes I see people using list comps as a for loop one-liner - maybe in code golf this has some virtue, but doing this [x.mutator_that_returns_None() for x in list_of_xes] feels abusive to me.
@AndrasDeak It was! Using a list comp as a one line for loop when you don't actually use the resulting list is evil, and should only be used for stuff like code golf.
Well depends on the circumstances, but often you use EAFBL, but say you can have strings/lists-of-strings as arguments, with the list-of-strings just having to add all strings in the list, you would do something like:
However wiith strings/list-of-strings it won't raise an error to fallback on the single addition method. Instead it considered "string" to be an iterable - thus it adds each character.
@MorganThrapp - if the concept of a Wallet was such that having one contain nested lists didn't make sense, then I think that passing an iterable to add() should be legit for adding all the items in the iterable.
@paul23 - oh yes, is the string arg supposed to be one item or many chars?
If I did want to have my wallet contain a nested list, say a list of photos in a little photo holder in the wallet, then I could wallet.add(PhotoHolder(list_of_photos))
@PaulMcGuire Well it just makes things hard when you try to add generics - what if the object you try to add in the future implements __items__ or something?
?? you mean __getitem__? __items__ is a new one for me, is that in Py3?
If you were going to design a single method to accept single items or iterables, then you would need to make that call up front, whether a string is a single item or a sequence of chars. If you wanted to treat it as a single item, then you would probably do an isinstance(arg, str) or isinstance(arg,basestring) to expressly handle it as a single item and not iterate over it.
> Given a date string of "March 7, 2014", parse() assumes a local time zone, but given an ISO format such as "2014-03-07" it will assume a time zone of UTC (ES5 and ECMAScript 2015). Therefore Date objects produced using those strings may represent different moments in time depending on the version of ECMAScript supported
> Because of the variances in parsing of date strings, it is recommended to always manually parse strings as results are inconsistent, especially across different ECMAScript implementations