Yes, I know the python approach is to use built-ins. But wouldn't it be cool if we could do mydict.values().tolist() instead? It would be more regular and intuitive and readable from an OO point of view. In my oppinion, this would be cleaner. Built-ins used like this look like an early decission made when designing an imperative language.
Luis On 27 mar, 09:14, alex23 <wuwe...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Mar 27, 3:44 pm, Aaron Brady <castiro...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > Is there a possibility of the dict_values, dict_items, and dict_keys > > objects growing a 'tolist' method? It's one of those little things > > that contributes to one's user experience. > > Probably not, because the Python approach is to use the builtins. I'm > not sure what you feel mydict.values().tolist() might offer over the > conventional list(mydict.values()). > > So yeah, -1. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list