On 24Dec2019 16:48, Avi Gross <avigr...@verizon.net> wrote:
Let me switch gears to the terminal comma situation. Unlike many
languages, Python decided a dangling comma is perfectly allowable in
many situations, perhaps all.
a=[1,2,3,]
a
[1, 2, 3]
[...]
And, of course, you can use the same dangling comma in making a tuple,
dictionary or set and who knows where else.
So, is that a feature you want warnings about? After all, a dangling
comma may simply mean you left something out and meant to add later?
To my mind the killer argument for trailing commas is things like
multiline lists, dicts or parameters. Example:
def function(
arg1=None,
arg2=FOO,
):
Imagine this for a comewhat extended set of parameters. Or similar for a
big list or dict (eg a "table" as part of a class definition).
By always including the trailing comma it is easier to insert or delete
lines, and it reduces diff noise if you're using revision control (no
commas flickering on and off in the diff output).
Cheers,
Cameron Simpson <c...@cskk.id.au>
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