Le mardi 25 mars 2014 19:30:34 UTC+1, Mark H. Harris a écrit : > greetings, I would like to create a lamda as follows: > > > > √ = lambda n: sqrt(n) > > > > > > On my keyboard mapping the "problem" character is alt-v which produces > > the radical symbol. When trying to set the symbol as a name within the > > name-space gives a syntax error: > > > > >>> from math import sqrt > > >>> > > >>> √ = lambda n: sqrt(n) > > SyntaxError: invalid character in identifier > > >>> > > >>> > > > > however this works: > > > > >>> > > >>> λ = lambda n: sqrt(n) > > >>> > > >>> λ(2) > > 1.4142135623730951 > > >>> > > > > The question is which unicode(s) are capable of being proper name > > characters, and which ones are off-limits, and why? > > > > > > marcus
>>> '√'.isidentifier() False >>> 'λ'.isidentifier() True >>> '$'.isidentifier() False >>> '啕'.isidentifier() True >>> 'a'.isidentifier() True >>> '啕2z'.isidentifier() True >>> print(''.isidentifier.__doc__) S.isidentifier() -> bool Return True if S is a valid identifier according to the language definition. >>> cf "unicode.org" doc jmf -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list