On Wed, 6 May 2015 10:40 pm, BartC wrote: > But I had in mind not implementing ++ and --, but detecting them and > issuing a warning,
That's a job for a linter, not the compiler. The compiler should be as flexible as possible in what it accepts: a , b=12+3 * 4,"hello" . upper () is perfectly legal code. The compiler shouldn't force you to write good looking code, apart from what is prohibited altogether. Both + and - are unary prefix operators, so you can apply + and - to any expression -- even an expression that already has a unary prefix operator: py> - --- +++ + - - + -- +++ --- 999 -999 Is that ugly, horrible code that nobody in their right mind would use in production? Absolutely. But the compiler can and should accept it, and linters (or human reviewers) should warn about it. -- Steven -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list