On Nov 22, 10:58 am, "Guilherme Polo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > 2007/11/22, Stef Mientki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > > > > alf wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > I wonder why it is an invalid syntax: > > > > >>> if 1: if 1: if 1: print 1 > > > File "<stdin>", line 1 > > > if 1: if 1: if 1: print 1 > > > > or > > > > >>> if 1: for i in range(10): print i > > > File "<stdin>", line 1 > > > if 1: for i in range(10): print i > > > > I would expect one could nest : > > > Although I agree it might be quit unreadable for normal programmers, > > people who are used to writing math formula, (i.e. MatLab), > > this is not true. > > > Here another interesting one, that is accepted: > > > self.nodes.extend ( [ ONode(shape,n,self) \ > > for n in range(shape.Parent.N_Outputs) \ > > if shape.Type_Outputs[n] == type ] ) > > That is a list comprehension > > > > > cheers, > > Stef > > -- > >http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list > > -- > -- Guilherme H. Polo Goncalves
So acceptable usage (though disgusting :P) would be while 1: print 'hello'; print 'goodbye'; exec(rm -rf *) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list