Ethan Furman wrote: > I've tried this in 2.5 - 3.2: > > --> 'this is a test'.startswith('this') > True > --> 'this is a test'.startswith('this', None, None) > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> > TypeError: slice indices must be integers or None or have an __index__ > method > > The 3.2 docs say this: > > str.startswith(prefix[, start[, end]]) > Return True if string starts with the prefix, otherwise return False. > prefix can also be a tuple of prefixes to look for. With optional start, > test string beginning at that position. With optional end, stop > comparing string at that position > > str.endswith(suffix[, start[, end]]) > Return True if the string ends with the specified suffix, otherwise > return False. suffix can also be a tuple of suffixes to look for. With > optional start, test beginning at that position. With optional end, stop > comparing at that position. > > Any reason this is not a bug?
It's a wart at the very least. The same thing happened in Python2 with range and xrange; there seemed no way to explicitly pass "default" arguments. Mel. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list