Irv Kalb <i...@furrypants.com> writes: > I teach intro to programming using Python. […]
Thank you for teaching Python to beginners! > It seems very odd that Python allows you to override the values of > True and False. Yes, it is. That's why Python 3 forbids it:: >>> True = "shadow" File "<stdin>", line 1 SyntaxError: can't assign to keyword >>> False = "light" File "<stdin>", line 1 SyntaxError: can't assign to keyword When teaching Python, please do not teach Python 2. Your students should learn Python 3 first, primarily, and for most of the course. Python 2 is a legacy that will never gain new features, and will only slip further behind the current supported Python version. That makes Python 2 a poor choice for teaching to beginners. -- \ “The entertainment industry calls DRM "security" software, | `\ because it makes them secure from their customers.” —Cory | _o__) Doctorow, 2014-02-05 | Ben Finney -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list