Guido van Rossum <gu...@python.org> added the comment:

On the one hand, I think that any framework that sets a convention for the 
meaning of annotations needs to cope with the possibility of other code using a 
different convention.  So in that sense this could be deemed a test case for 
the robustness of such a framework. :-)

On the other hand, having this precedent might give passers-by and perhaps 
future stdlib developers the idea that a convention has been adopted by the 
stdlib -- and its presence might impede the future selection of a better 
convention for the stdlib (or perhaps for all of Python).

So, given that they aren't used, and that they don't even seem to be set 
consistently, I think it's (marginally) better if they are removed and replaced 
by comments.

FWIW, I've long wished that the stdlib (and perhaps even PEP 8) would adopt a 
*comment-based* convention for indicating the types of arguments.  The Google 
Python style guide has a useful standard convention for this purpose:

http://google-styleguide.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/pyguide.html?showone=Comments#Comments

----------
assignee: gvanrossum -> rhettinger

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<http://bugs.python.org/issue10899>
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