En Fri, 09 Mar 2007 06:14:46 -0300, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió: > A '?' placed in the preceding whitespace of a line as a means of > quickly highlighting a line or block of code for special attention. > The interpreter simply ignores these characters, and executes the code > as if each WIP character wasn't there. The value-added comes from how > IDEs can exploit this to color the line or code block (in a > customisable fashion as with other context-dependent IDE formatting).
This could be implemented without new syntax: just make your editor recognize some special comments, and apply the highlighting to the following block. By example, # XXX Remove this when FuruFaifa is fixed to always provide # XXX the names in the same order names.sort() names.reverse() if names==oldnames: ... would highlight the first 4 lines (let's say, up to the next blank line or dedent). > 2. The HALT comment: > > A '!' at the start of a line, indicating the end of the script proper. > The interpreter would register this one, and ignore everything after > it, a bit like a sys.exit() call but also stopping it from picking > syntax errors after the HALT. IDEs could then 'grey out' (or 'yellow > out' or whatever) all following characters, including later HALT > comments. You accidentally type a ! somewhere, and your module stops working - not so good :( and worse, hard to find. I sometimes use '''this string marks''' to ignore whole blocks of code. It works fine unless the block already contains the same kind of triple-quoted string... > As far as I can see, neither of these would break backwards > compatibility and, like the @ decorator, if you don't like it, you > wouldn't have to use it. I don't know enough about the guts of Python > to say much about ease of implementation, but it doesn't seem like it > would be too hard. The main problem with new syntax is breaking compatibility with older versions, and I doubt it's worth the pain just for highlighting or playing interactively, so you don't have a great chance of them being implemented... -- Gabriel Genellina -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list