Op 27/10/2021 om 11:59 schreef Chris Angelico:
You can argue the word "need" all you like, but the fact remains that YOU want a change, so YOU have to convince people of the benefits.
That is true. But there is nothing wrong in asking what might convince people. But I'll give you my thought below and you can decide in how far this is convincing to you. I regularly come with a problem for which a one and a half loop is very suited to solve it. Unfortunately python doesn't have a one and a half loop. However with the introduction of the walrus operator there is a way to simulate a significant number of one and a half loops. Consider the following: do a = expr1 b = expr2 while 2 * a > b: more calculations We could write that now as while [ a := expr1, b := expr2, 2 * a > b][-1]: more calculations Now there is some ugly side on the above and it may not be obvious at first what is going on, but once you understand it is a rather easy idiom. I certainly prefer it over writing something like while True: a = expr1 b = expr2 if not (2 * a > b): break more calculations. So for me any limitation on the walrus operator that is removed is a plus because it will allow me to write more one and a half loops in more natural way. Off course should the python developers decide to intoduce a real one and a half loop all the above is probably a whole let useful. -- Antoon Pardon -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list