On Wednesday, July 20, 2016 at 6:19:45 PM UTC+12, Chris Angelico wrote: > > On Wed, Jul 20, 2016 at 9:58 AM, Lawrence D’Oliveiro wrote: >> >> On Wednesday, July 20, 2016 at 9:24:57 AM UTC+12, bream...@gmail.com wrote: >>> >>> On Tuesday, July 19, 2016 at 3:54:12 AM UTC+1, Lawrence D’Oliveiro wrote: >>>> >>>> On Tuesday, July 19, 2016 at 11:12:52 AM UTC+12, bream...@gmail.com >>>> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> On Monday, July 18, 2016 at 10:48:15 PM UTC+1, Lawrence D’Oliveiro >>>>> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> <https://github.com/ldo/qahirah> >>>>>> When you have lots of read/write properties, I find __slots__ to be a >>>>>> good idea. >>>>> >>>>> Please explain why, thank you. >>>> >>>> I was trying something like >>>> >>>> ctx.dashes = ((0.1, 0.03, 0.03, 0.03), 0) >>>> >>>> and wondering why it wasn’t working... >>> >>> This makes no sense to me at all. You appear to be trying to create a >>> tuple, which contains a tuple and an integer. You then say it doesn't >>> work, but imply that using __slots__ fixes the problem. So please explain >>> exactly what you were trying to achieve, the exact error you got, with the >>> complete traceback, and how using __slots__ fixed the problem. >> >> No traceback. The lines were simply coming out solid, instead of dashed. > > And __slots__ fixed the problem how, exactly?
The Context attribute that controls the dash settings is called “dash”, not “dashes”. > This sounds like the sort of cargo cult debugging that I'd expect of PHP > programmers ("I put addslashes around everything and now it works, so in > future I'll use addslashes everywhere"), but around here, we're better than > that. OK, boss. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list