On Wed, 14 Dec 2022 10:53:10 -0800 (PST), Aaron P <transreduction...@gmail.com> declaimed the following:
Late response here, and the concept may have been covered in skimmed-over posts.. >I occasionally run across something like: > >for idx, thing in enumerate(things): > if idx == 103: > continue > do_something_with(thing) > For this example, I'd probably reverse the condition. if idx != 103: do_something_with(thing) and hence completely drop the "continue" -- after all, if idx is 103, the if statement falls through, and the end of the loop acts as an implicit "continue" OTOH: if the "if/continue" is buried in four or five layers of conditionals, it could be cleaner than trying to configure the conditionals to have a chained exit. -- Wulfraed Dennis Lee Bieber AF6VN wlfr...@ix.netcom.com http://wlfraed.microdiversity.freeddns.org/ -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list