On Thu, Sep 17, 2020 at 8:57 PM Brendan Barnwell <[email protected]>
wrote:
> On 2020-09-16 21:52, Dennis Sweeney wrote:
> > TL;DR: I propose the following behavior:
> >
> > >>> s = "She turned me into a newt."
> > >>> f"She turned me into a {animal}." = s
> > >>> animal
> > 'newt'
> >
> > >>> f"A {animal}?" = s
> > Traceback (most recent call last):
> > File "<pyshell#2>", line 1, in <module>
> > f"A {animal}?" = s
> > ValueError: f-string assignment target does not match 'She turned
> me into a newt.'
> >
> > >>> f"{hh:d}:{mm:d}:{ss:d}" = "11:59:59"
> > >>> hh, mm, ss
> > (11, 59, 59)
>
> I don't like this at all. It looks like assigning to a literal,
> which
> is weird.
People keep saying this, but iterable unpacking looks like assigning to a
literal (a tuple or list literal) just as much.
Also PEP 622 proposes something that looks like assignment to a function
call, albeit within a match/case statement.
It's natural to have symmetry between assignments and expression. For
another example, look at subscripting, i.e. `__getitem__` vs `__setitem__`.
> Also, it hides the assignment target within a string of
> potentially unbounded length and complexity, which makes it difficult to
> reason about code because it's hard to see when variables are being
> assigned to.
It's really not. A decent IDE should already be able to automatically show
you assignments and usages of a variable - PyCharm does with one
Ctrl+click. A syntax highlighter that can handle f-strings will make the
assignments obvious at a glance.
> It also introduces a whole host of questions about the
> details of the parsing (i.e., how does the greediness work if the
> pattern is something like "{one} {two} {three} {four}" and the string to
> be parsed is five or ten words).
>
This I agree with, another reason to go for putting regexes in the
f-strings like I suggested.
> I think a better approach for something like this would be a
> .parse()
> method of some sort on strings, sort of like the inverse of .format().
> It would parse a given string according to the format string and return
> a dict with the mappings (just as format can take a dict in and return
> the string with the substitutions made). So it would be like:
>
> >>> pattern = "That {animal} is really {attribute}."
> >>> d = pattern.parse("That snake is really powerful.")
> >>> d['animal']
> 'snake'
> >>> d['attribute']
> 'powerful'
>
I think someone else just made the same proposal. But how does this solve
the greediness issue?
> This wouldn't let you assign the results into local variables, but
> I
> think that's a good thing. Creating local variables "programmatically"
> is not a good idea; it's better to use a dict.
>
How is
f"{a} {b}" = "1 2"
creating local variables any more "programmatically" than
a, b = "1 2".split()
? The variables are static and visible to the compiler.
_______________________________________________
Python-ideas mailing list -- [email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]
https://mail.python.org/mailman3/lists/python-ideas.python.org/
Message archived at
https://mail.python.org/archives/list/[email protected]/message/P24DJENN2XE6GD7Y35DBARGUJ4Y6RAJC/
Code of Conduct: http://python.org/psf/codeofconduct/