On Wednesday, May 17, 2017 at 5:48:30 AM UTC-4, Cem Karan wrote: > On May 16, 2017, at 12:36 PM, rzed <rzan...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > On Friday, May 12, 2017 at 6:02:58 AM UTC-4, Steve D'Aprano wrote: > >> One of the more controversial aspects of the Python ecosystem is the Python > >> docs. Some people love them, and some people hate them and describe them as > >> horrible. > >> > > [...] > > > > One thing I would love to see in any function or class docs is a few > > example invocations, preferably non-trivial. If I need to see more, I can > > read the entire doc, but most times I just want a refresher on how the > > function is called. Does it use keywords? Are there required nameless > > parameters? In what order? A line or two would immediately clarify that > > most of the time. > > > > Apart from that, links to docs for uncommon functions (or to the docs of > > the module, if there are many) would be at least somewhat useful. > > I'd like to see complete signatures in the docstrings, so when I use help() > on something that has *args or **kwargs I can see what the arguments actually > are.
Can you give an example of such a method? Often, that signature is used because there is no pre-conception of what the arguments might be. --Ned. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list