On 17/07/2012 18:29, Ethan Furman wrote:
Terry Reedy wrote:
On 7/17/2012 10:23 AM, Lipska the Kat wrote:
Well 'type-bondage' is a strange way of thinking about compile time type
checking and making code easier to read (and therefor debug
'type-bondage' is the requirement to restrict function inputs and
output to one declared type, where the type declaration mechanisms are
usually quite limited.
>>> def max(a, b):
if a <= b: return a
return b
Surely you meant 'if a >= b: . . .'
No worries, I'm sure your unittests would have caught it. ;)
~Ethan~
Wouldn't the compiler have caught it before the unittests? :-)
--
Cheers.
Mark Lawrence.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list