On Fri, 03 Oct 2008 02:09:09 -0700, Carl Banks wrote: > On Oct 2, 8:02 pm, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> Then add subscription access too. By aliasing `__getitem__()` to >> `__contains__()`. And `__setitem__()` could be implemented to add or >> remove objects by assigning truth values. So hypothetically: >> >> >>> a = set([1, 2, 3]) >> >>> a[1] >> True >> >>> a[4] >> False >> >>> a[2] = False >> >>> a >> set([1, 3]) >> >>> a[4] = True >> >>> a >> set([1, 3, 4]) >> >>> del a[1] >> >>> a >> >> set([3, 4]) >> >> I wouldn't want that addition to `set`\s but at least it can be >> implemented without introducing inconsistencies. > > > If set behaved that way then "del a[1]" wouldn't behave like del > anymore. Normally, "del whatever" means that you can no longer use > "whatever"; in this proposal you can.
Then there should be no ``del`` for `collections.defaultdict`: In [169]: from collections import defaultdict In [170]: d = defaultdict(int) In [171]: d[42] Out[171]: 0 In [172]: del d[42] In [173]: d[42] Out[173]: 0 Ciao, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list