>>>>> "Antoon" == Antoon Pardon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Antoon> Op 2005-03-27, Joal Heagney schreef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: >> Antoon Pardon wrote: >> <snip> >>> So python choose a non-deterministic direction. To me (2,3) + (4,5) >>> equals (6,8). I don't dispute that having an operator to combine >>> (2,3) and (4,5) in (2,3,4,5) is usefull, but they should never have >>> used the "+" for that. >> >> ("alph", "bravo") + ("delta", "max") --> ("alphdelta", "bravomax") Antoon> No, that wouldn't be the result. You are still using "+" Antoon> for concatenation, even if only on strings. I say python Antoon> should have used something else for concatenation (string Antoon> concatenation included) To me, nothing is more natural than "ab" + "cd" == "abcd". Also [1,2] + [3,4] == [1,2,3,4]. "Dot product" is not really too useful in real world (non-mathematical) apps. -- Ville Vainio http://tinyurl.com/2prnb -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list