DL Neil <pythonl...@danceswithmice.info> writes: > Possible solution: > To make anything more than the trivial case readable, I think I'd put > the list processing into one function, and the exception into another > (except that this case is so trivial), ie > > if list: > process_list() #the heading and for-loop, as above > else: > print( "Sorry...
(As an aside: It's best to avoid choosing names like ‘list’ that clobber built-in names; your code examples are harder to read that way. I'll assume a different name, ‘ipsums’.) One aspect of that example I would prefer to avoid: It scatters the handling of the list to different locations in the code. It's not obvious from the purpose of ‘process_list’ whether that function should be handling an empty list; this could lead to double-handling in different locations. An alternative to consider:: if ipsums: for item in ipsums: process_item(item) else: print("Sorry...") An advantage of this is that the handling of the list is all in the same place, where changing that logic later will be easier. The ‘process_item’ then just assumes some other code has decided which items to handle; it becomes correspondingly simpler. -- \ “Two possibilities exist: Either we are alone in the Universe | `\ or we are not. Both are equally terrifying.” —Arthur C. Clarke, | _o__) 1999 | Ben Finney -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list