Just a couple thoughts: > An enumeration is an exclusive set of symbolic names bound > to arbitrary unique values.
Uniqueness imposes an odd constraint that you can't have synonyms in the set: >>> shades = enum({white:100, grey:50, gray:50, black:0}) Not a bad thing, as it would then have interesting results upon iterating (would the above example have three or four passes through the iteration loop?), but there could be some handy uses for enums containing duplicates. > >>> Grades = enum('A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'F') This produces the counter-intuitive result of >>> Grades.A > Grades.B False Sure, one can bung with it and create the set of grades backwards, but then iteration becomes weird. Perhaps the ability to override the comparitor? -tkc -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list