Steven D'Aprano wrote: > No, "minimum number of space characters" means "you don't use enough > spaces", not "your variable names are too short" *wink* > Hmm. Guess I can't read too well.
> Within a single line, a good guideline is to leave a single space on > either side of pluses and minuses (e.g. x**2 + 5*x - 3). Likewise, a > single space on both sides of an equal sign and a single space after > commas tend to be usual. What I produced was natural for my fingers, but I can see that it's difficult on the eyes. I'll try to remember that. > > As for variables cx, cy, dx and dy, I don't believe that they are unclear. > If your function is highly mathematical in nature, I believe it is > acceptable if not expected to follow standard mathematical conventions > such as r for radius, x and y for real numbers, z for complex, dx for > delta (change of) x, etc. If in doubt, when initialising the variable add > a comment spelling it out in full. > > On the other hand, you do have an argument "value" with default 255, with > not even hint for what it is. Well, value is just a value. It's the number that get's punched into the array for any points within the circle. I didn't have any better name I could think of. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list