Rahul Jha <rahul7...@gmail.com> added the comment:
> That may actually be another alternative: instead of doing the "try > appending newlines and see if it works or generates different errors", > we may be able to switch to the tokenizer if the initial compilation > fails and check for hanging INDENT tokens (i.e. INDENTS without a > corresponding DEDENT). That would get us much closer to what the real > eval loop is doing. >From what I understand, "checking for two or more hanging INDENTS" and, >"hardcoding a check for nonlocal SyntaxErrors in codeop._maybe_compile" are >two different solutions, right? If yes, do we have an answer to which one of >them is more cleaner, and henceforth, the preferable solution? I, personally, like the idea of checking INDENTS primarily because of it's reduced specificity, but I am in no position to comment on this (I already kinda did ':D), and you folks know better! For all we know, we should be optimizing for specificity. Also, reading Nick's comments and the comc's code, gives me the feeling that a fix for this wouldn't require drastic changes. I'm slowly starting my journey with CPython, and I'd like to contribute a patch if that is the case. Thanks! ---------- _______________________________________ Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org> <https://bugs.python.org/issue19335> _______________________________________ _______________________________________________ Python-bugs-list mailing list Unsubscribe: https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-bugs-list/archive%40mail-archive.com