On Wednesday, November 25, 2015 at 8:20:59 AM UTC-5, BartC wrote: > Accept that some things /are/ a source of confusion. When, in writing > documentation, I find something hard to explain something, then I try > and make it simpler in the program. But not enough of that goes on: it > seems to be more lucrative to write thicker user manuals, and provide > longer training courses, than to make software simpler.
You seem to be insinuating that someone has made Python unusually complex for personal gain? I'm not sure what to do with that: it's an absurd claim. > > "Why does the loop run forever?" > > > > The coin doesn't magically toss itself, no matter how intuitively obvious it > > is that it should. > > The concept of variables doesn't take long to learn in an 'ordinary' > language. There is a natural tension between making a language simple enough that it has no surprises or difficult parts; and making a language rich enough that it can be used for building serious systems. If you have another language to propose as a better beginner's learning language, please propose it. I think it serves beginners better to teach them with a language that they can then go on to use for building real things. Is there a real language (an "ordinary" language) that you think is better than Python for that? Empirical evidence in the world says, "not really." I know you have languages of your own, and that you like the way they work better. We have no way of evaluating their power or simplicity, since they are not available to us. I agree with you: there are things about Python that surprise people. That's because it's a programming language, and very very little about programming languages is obvious. The best we can hope for is "familiar," and even then, familiar to who? High school algebra students will at first be baffled by "x = x + 1", an equation which is clearly unsatisfiable. So yes, there are parts of Python that are hard, and surprising. There are subtleties that require study and careful thought. We believe that on the balance, Python is better than many of the alternatives. You are welcome to disagree, but don't be surprised if you encounter vigorous counter-arguments in a Python mailing list! There isn't much we can do about the structure of the language, certainly not the parts that have been discussed in this thread. The best we can do is try to explain it better. --Ned. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list