On May 16, 5:28 pm, Citizen Kant <citizenk...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I'm just an honest and polite guy asking you guys a couple of simple out of > the box questions that are important for me. Everyone here has the freedom > to keep on with their own assumptions and beliefs. If someone's interested > on thinking outside the box with me for the sake of helping me, that would > be great and highly appreciated. Thinking outside the box isn't just a > cheap thing since it's highly creative. Take note that being able to think > and write in English doesn't make you writers as, put, Faulkner. Same > happens with any other language, same happens with Python.
Let me quote your first post (OP): > I roughly came to the idea that Python could be considered as an *economic > mirror for data*, one that mainly *mirrors* the data the programmer types > on its black surface, not exactly as the programmer originally typed it, > but expressed in the most economic way possible. And let me suggest that you follow your own advise -- Can you say what you have to say in 1/10th the number of words? Ok if not 1/10th then 1/5th? 1-third? If you can, you are on the way to appreciating something which you almost came to and then lost in interminable prolixity, to wit: > The starting question I make to myself about Python is: > which is the single and most basic use of Python as the entity it is? IOW a programmer is one who quickly and easily comes to the nub/core/ kernel/essence of a problem and as easily and adroitly shaves off the irrelevant. Else: (you cant /wont reduce your prolixity) You are bullshitting us and we are being trolled by you -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list