On Wed, 11 Apr 2007 13:13:20 +0000, Antoon Pardon wrote: >> Lists are designed for sequences of homogeneous items, e.g.: >> >> L = [1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32] >> while tuples are designed to be more like structs or records, with >> heterogeneous items, e.g.: >> >> T = ("Fred", 32, 12.789, {}, None, '\t') > > I think you are confused.
Anything is possible. > Last time I heard this homogeneous items stuf, > it had nothing to do with the types being the same. They were homogeneous > because they somehow belonged together and heterogeneous because they > just happened to live together. Similarity of type played no part in > calling the data homogeneous or heterogeneous. Nevertheless, regardless of whether the items have the same type or different types, you don't need an index method for heterogeneous items. Like I said, think of a tuple as a struct. Even if the fields of the struct all have the same type, there is little reason to ever ask "which field has such-and-such a value?". Anyway, that's was the reasoning. As I've said, tuples do double-duty as both immutable lists and struct-like objects. I wouldn't object to them growing index and count methods -- but you won't see me volunteering to write the code for that, because I don't care that much. So how about it? All you people who desperately want tuples to grow an index method -- will any of you donate your time to write and maintain the code? -- Steven. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list