Hi, Currently, in various places in my code, I have the equivalent of:
for x in it: if complicated_calculation_1(): cleanup() break complicated_calculation_2() if complicated_calculation_3(): cleanup() break Obviously, I'm repeating myself by having two separate calls to cleanup(). I can't really see a nicer way to do this. (Though I see plenty of non-nice ways to do this, such as adding "broken = True" in front of every "break", and then after the loop is done, have an "if broken" section.) Other solutions that I'm not particularly fond of can be found on stackexchange, where someone else is trying to do the same thing: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3296044/opposite-of-python-for-else I'm wondering if there is a demand for expanding the "for...else" functionality to be expanded also have a block of code that only gets called if the loop is broken out of. I.e.: for x in it: ... then: # "break" was called ... else: # "break was not called ... -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list