On Sun, 06 Aug 2006 11:37:46 -0300 Gerhard Fiedler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
#> On 2006-08-06 06:41:27, Slawomir Nowaczyk wrote: #> #> > Since Python doesn't (supposedly) have variables, it couldn't have come #> > from Python. #> #> The idea (of this part of the thread) was to find the analogy between C #> variables and Python variables, at least that's what you said a few #> messages ago. Yes. *I* believe Python has variables. I was under an impression that you do not. But I do not believe there is any "identity of a variable" which corresponds to "id()". Still, you used such term -- repeatedly. I do not know what do you mean by it. #> You claimed that there exists such an analogy between C variables #> and Python variables. Yes. #> (We never disputed the existence of Python variables; not sure why #> you come up with that now. That was so far back in this thread.) Well, I *only* came out with C/Python analogy in order to show that it actually *does* make sense to talk about variables in Python -- since some people claimed Python variables are a completely different kind of beast than C variables, thus we should not be using the same name. It was never my goal to show that Python and C variables behave the same way or anything. So it seems like we misunderstood each others intents. -- Best wishes, Slawomir Nowaczyk ( [EMAIL PROTECTED] ) I don't care if I AM a lemming. I'm NOT going! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list