Peter, Of course each language has commonly used idioms as C with pointer arithmetic and code like *p++=*q++ but my point is that although I live near a seaway and from where C originated, I am not aware of words like "c-way" or "scenic" as compared to the way people keep saying "pythonic".
Yes, languages develop idioms and frankly, many are replaced with time. And, yes, I am sure I can write FORTRAN style in any language as I used to teach it, but WATFOR? If the question is to show a dozen solutions for a problem written in VALID python and ask a panel of seasoned python programmers which they would prefer, then sometimes there is a more pythonic solution by that definition. Give the same test to newbies who each came from a different language background and are just getting started, and I am not sure I care how they vote! I suggest that given a dozen such choices, several may be reasonable choices and in some cases, I suggest the non-pythonic choice is the right one such as when you expect someone to port your code to other languages and you need to keep it simple. I am simply saying that for ME, some questions are not as simple as others. I am more interested in whether others can read and understand my code, and it runs without problems, and maybe even is slightly efficient, than whether someone deems it pythonic. -----Original Message----- From: Python-list <python-list-bounces+avi.e.gross=gmail....@python.org> On Behalf Of Peter J. Holzer Sent: Saturday, March 4, 2023 2:48 AM To: python-list@python.org Subject: Re: Which more Pythonic - self.__class__ or type(self)? On 2023-03-03 13:51:11 -0500, avi.e.gr...@gmail.com wrote: > I do not buy into any concept about something being pythonic or not. > > Python has grown too vast and innovated quite a bit, but also borrowed from > others and vice versa. > > There generally is no universally pythonic way nor should there be. Is there > a C way Oh, yes. Definitely. > and then a C++ way and an R way or JavaScript JavaScript has a quite distinctive style. C++ is a big language (maybe too big for a single person to grok completely) so there might be several "dialects". I haven't seen enough R code to form an opinion. > or does only python a language with a philosophy of what is the > pythonic way? No. Even before Python existed there was the adage "a real programmer can write FORTRAN in any language", indicating that idiomatic usage of a language is not governed by syntax and library alone, but there is a cultural element: People writing code in a specific language also read code by other people in that language, so they start imitating each other, just like speakers of natural languages imitate each other. Someone coming from another language will often write code which is correct but un-idiomatic, and you can often guess which language they come from (they are "writing FORTRAN in Python"). Also quite similar to natural languages where you can guess the native language of an L2 speaker by their accent and phrasing. hp -- _ | Peter J. Holzer | Story must make more sense than reality. |_|_) | | | | | h...@hjp.at | -- Charles Stross, "Creative writing __/ | http://www.hjp.at/ | challenge!" -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list