On 30 sep, 19:22, Andreas Waldenburger <use...@geekmail.invalid> wrote: > On Thu, 30 Sep 2010 03:42:29 -0700 (PDT) > > "bruno.desthuilli...@gmail.com" <bruno.desthuilli...@gmail.com> wrote: > > On 29 sep, 19:20, Seebs <usenet-nos...@seebs.net> wrote: > > > On 2010-09-29, Tracubik <affdfsdfds...@b.com> wrote: > > > > button = gtk.Button(("False,", "True,")[fill==True]) > > > > Oh, what a nasty idiom. > > > Well, it's not very different from dict-based dispatch , which is the > > core of OO polymorphic dispatch in quite a few dynamic OOPLs. > > > Anyway, it's a common Python idiom and one that's not specially hard > > to grasp so I don't see any legibility problem here. > > But it does violate the "explicit is better than implicit" tenet, don't > you think?
Why so ? The doc clearly states that booleans are integers with True == 1 and False == 0, so there's nothing implicit here. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list