Op 2005-08-31, Bengt Richter schreef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > On 31 Aug 2005 07:26:48 GMT, Antoon Pardon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >>Op 2005-08-30, Bengt Richter schreef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: >>> On 30 Aug 2005 10:07:06 GMT, Antoon Pardon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>> >>>>Op 2005-08-30, Terry Reedy schreef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: >>>>> >>>>> "Paul Rubin" <"http://phr.cx"@NOSPAM.invalid> wrote in message >>>>> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] >>>>> >>>>>> Really it's x[-1]'s behavior that should go, not find/rfind. >>>>> >>>>> I complete disagree, x[-1] as an abbreviation of x[len(x)-1] is extremely >>>>> useful, especially when 'x' is an expression instead of a name. >>>> >>>>I don't think the ability to easily index sequences from the right is >>>>in dispute. Just the fact that negative numbers on their own provide >>>>this functionality. >>>> >>>>Because I sometimes find it usefull to have a sequence start and >>>>end at arbitrary indexes, I have written a table class. So I >>>>can have a table that is indexed from e.g. -4 to +6. So how am >>>>I supposed to easily get at that last value? >>> Give it a handy property? E.g., >>> >>> table.as_python_list[-1] >> >>Your missing the point, I probably didn't make it clear. >> >>It is not about the possibilty of doing such a thing. It is >>about python providing a frame for such things that work >>in general without the need of extra properties in 'special' >>cases. >> > How about interpreting seq[i] as an abbreviation of seq[i%len(seq)] ? > That would give a consitent interpretation of seq[-1] and no errors > for any value ;-)
But the question was not about having a consistent interpretation for -1, but about an easy way to get the last value. But I like your idea. I just think there should be two differnt ways to index. maybe use braces in one case. seq{i} would be pure indexing, that throws exceptions if you are out of bound seq[i] would then be seq{i%len(seq)} -- Antoon Pardon -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list