Edward Elliott wrote: > Now this is interesting. I broke the line up into separate arguments and it > seemed to work fine: > > $ python -c 'if 1==1: print "yes"' 'else: print "no"' > yes > > But then I tested the else branch and it produces no output: > $ python -c 'if 1==0: print "yes"' 'else: print "no"' > $ > > If putting the else in a separate arg unbinds it from the if, I would expect > a syntax error. If OTOH naked elses are allowed on the command line for > some odd reason, then this shouldn't happen: > > $ python -c 'else: print "no"' > File "<string>", line 1 > else: print "no" > ^ > SyntaxError: invalid syntax > > What's with the silent failure in the two-arg version? If the else arg is > syntactically acceptable, why doesn't it behave as expected?
hint: $ python -c 'import sys; print sys.argv' 'else: print "no"' </F> -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list