Hi, On 2010-09-25 14:11, Yingjie Lan wrote: > Having more than one way of doing things sometimes is good.
In my opinion this _isn't_ a situation where it's good. :) L[::-1] is only marginally longer than -1 * L I think this small gain doesn't justify "violating" this "Python Zen" rule (from `import this`): There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it. One could argue that using L[::-1] isn't "obvious" but I believe the rule refers to being obvious to people who have used Python for a while. Besides that, multiplying a list with a negative value to give a reverse list isn't so intuitive either. :-) On 2010-09-25 13:45, Thomas Jollans wrote: > Multiplying a list by a negative integer should produce a list of negative > length, which does not exist. IMHO, the only correct behaviour would be to > raise an exception, though one could argue that there are practical benefits > for the operation to succeed for any integer operand. I agree with raising an exception, probably a ValueError. Stefan -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list