On Tue, Aug 9, 2011 at 9:42 PM, Yingjie Lan <lany...@yahoo.com> wrote: > Hi all, > > When writing a long expresion, one usually would like to break it into > multiple lines. Currently, you may use a '\' to do so, but it looks a little > awkward (more like machine-oriented thing). Therefore I start wondering why > not allow line breaking at an operator, which is the standard way of breaking > a long expression in publication? Here is an example: > > #the old way > > x = 1+2+3+4+\ > 1+2+3+4 > > #the new way > x = 1+2+3+4+ #line continues as it is clearly unfinished > > 1+2+3+4
# the currently allowed way x = (1+2+3+4+ 1+2+3+4) # note the parentheses I think this is sufficient. > Of course, the dot operator is also included, which may facilitate method > chaining: > > x = svg.append( 'circle' ). > r(2).cx(1).xy(1). > foreground('black').bkground('white') Python does not particularly endorse method chaining; it's why list.sort(), list.append(), and similar methods of built-in types return None rather than self. Also, I dislike this for the dot operator especially, as it can obscure whether a method call or a function call is taking place. Cheers, Chris -- http://rebertia.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list