Alexey Borzenkov: > I was so attached to these "nameless" def-forms that I was even shocked > when I found that this doesn't work in python: > f = def(a, b): > return a*b > Another good feature of Boo, btw.
I think Boo has some good things worth consideration (and maybe worth to copy) and some bad things that I like less than Python ones. Turning def and class into functions reduces the need of lambdas (compared to a lambda the required return is the only thing in the way) and I like it, but maybe it reduces code readabilty a bit for people that have just started to program: mul2 = def(a, b): return a * b Instead of: def mul2(a, b): return a * b The lightweight Io language uses an even simpler approach, some examples: http://www.iolanguage.com/about/samplecode/ An example: factorial := method(n, if(n == 1, 1, n * factorial(n - 1))) The "method" function is used to define functions... Bye, bearophile -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list