Paul Rubin <http://[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Not trying to pick on you personally but there's this disease when a > newbie comes with a basically simple question (in this case, how to > solve the problem with ordinary lists) and gets back a lot of > complex, overly general "graduate level" solutions. Is that a disease? I would characterise it as symptomatic of a very healthy programming community. We like interesting problems, and enjoy coming up with ever more elegant solutions. The discussions that ensue are healthy, not diseased. Whether that's exactly what the original poster in such a thread wants is beside the point. This forum is for the benefit of all participants, and discussing an apparently simple problem to discover its complexities is part of the enjoyment. Enjoyment of the discussion, after all, is the main reward most people can ever hope to get for participation in most threads here. -- \ "Remember: every member of your 'target audience' also owns a | `\ broadcasting station. These 'targets' can shoot back." -- | _o__) Michael Rathbun to advertisers, news.admin.net-abuse.email | Ben Finney -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list