Terry J. Reedy <tjre...@udel.edu> added the comment:
In 2.x, map(None, 'abc', 'zyz') == [('a', 'z'), ('b', 'y'), ('c', 'z')], but with the addition of zip, so that zip('abc', 'xyz') has the same result, we deprecated that use of None to mean identity function. For python-coded functions, a default is needed to make a keyword-only argument optional, and preferred over use of *args for making positional arguments optional. Unless I am missing something, a function can special-case 'key is identity', to avoid overhead, just as well as it can special-case 'key is None'. So rather than extend 'key=None', to me a kludge, I would rather replace it with 'key=identity'. Both can be accepted during a deprecation period. For instance, after adding identity, def nsmallest(n, iterable, key=identity): ... if key is identity or key is None: # key in (identity, None) result = min(it, default=sentinel) ... Since no one need ever write key=None, explicit passing should be rare. It seems to me that the main reason for the type declaration of key to include None is so that the def statement itself passes a consistency check with the None default. Once that is changed, most people should be able to use a simple callable declaration. I am considering this for python-ideas. Since the weekly issues list came out just 10 hours ago, I will not close this yet, but I will if still open in couple of days and no coredev objections. ---------- nosy: +terry.reedy _______________________________________ Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org> <https://bugs.python.org/issue34149> _______________________________________ _______________________________________________ Python-bugs-list mailing list Unsubscribe: https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-bugs-list/archive%40mail-archive.com