On Tue, Nov 25, 2008 at 3:16 PM, News123 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi, > > Let's imagine following code > > def specialfunc(): > print "very special function" > > name= getuserinput() > if name == 'one_name_out_of_a_million': > print "Hey your name '%s' is really rare" % namee > specialfunk() > > my python script could survive thousands of runs before falling into > the mis-spelled code section. ('namee' instead of 'name' and > 'specialfunck()' instead of 'specialfunc()' > I know that good designers should always test their code and have > complete code coverage, before releasing their beasts into the wild, but > in my experience this is not always what happens. > > I fell already over quite of my own sins, but also over typoes of other > python authors. > > Is there any way in python to check for mis-spelled variable / function > names? > > > In perl for example 'use strict;' would detect bad variable names, > though it wouldn't detect calls to undeclared functions. > > I am aware, that there is absolutely valid (and useful) python code with > undefined functions / variable names. > > However for the scripts that I write I would prefer to identify as many > typoes as possibe already when trying to run the script the first (and > not the millionth) time. > > Do you have ideas suggestions? > Are there any 'lint' like tools trying to analyze python code for > potential stupidities?
PyLint: http://www.logilab.org/857 PyChecker: http://pychecker.sourceforge.net/ I believe they both check for variable name typos, among many other things. Cheers, Chris -- Follow the path of the Iguana... http://rebertia.com > > If yes, what would be 'the' way to add these tools / modules at )least > during the development cycle) to the scripts. > > > thanks in advance for any thoughts / suggestions. > > > bye > > > N > -- > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list > -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list