I was doing some maintenance now on a script of mine… I noticed that I compose strings in this little 54 line file multipole times using the + operator. I was prototyping at the time I wrote it and it was quick and easy. I don’t really care for the way they read. Here’s 3 examples:
if k + ‘_@‘ in documents: timeKey = k + ‘_@‘ historyKey = thingID + ‘_’ + k I’m curious where others lean stylistically with this kind of thing. I see *at least* 2 other alternatives: Use join(): if ‘’.join((k, ‘_@‘)) in documents: timeKey = ‘’.join((k, ‘_@‘)) historyKey = ‘_’.join((thingID, k)) I don’t really like any of these. Maybe the 3rd, but I’d really rather see the pattern out. I also don’t like that I have to double the parens just to get a single arg joinable tuple for join() Use format(): if ‘{}_@‘.format(k) in documents: timeKey = ‘{}_@‘.format(k) historyKey = ‘{}_{}’.format(thingID, k) I like these because you see a template of the values. But its still longer than just using +. So I’m curious from those more seasoned, when they tend to use which approaches, and why. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list