Charles Hixson <charleshi...@earthlink.net> writes: > On 10/13/2013 10:02 PM, Steven D'Aprano wrote: >> On Sun, 13 Oct 2013 20:13:32 -0700, Tim Roberts wrote: >> >>> def add(c1, c2): >>> % Decode >>> c1 = ord(c1) - 65 >>> c2 = ord(c2) - 65 >>> % Process >>> i1 = (c1 + c2) % 26 >>> % Encode >>> return chr(i1+65) >> Python uses # for comments, not %, as I'm sure you know. What language >> were you thinking off when you wrote the above? >> >> >> > IIRC Lisp uses % for comments, but it may need to be doubled. (It's > been doubled in the examples I've seen, and I don't remember the > syntax.) > Perhaps Scheme has the same convention, but Scheme could be considered a > part of the Lisp clade.
Lisp and scheme use semicolon (;). It wouldn't have been that difficult to look that up I think. -- Piet van Oostrum <p...@vanoostrum.org> WWW: http://pietvanoostrum.com/ PGP key: [8DAE142BE17999C4] -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list