On 29 Gen, 17:30, Peter Otten <__pete...@web.de> wrote:
> I think you can work around the problem. The following should pass in Python
> 2.6 and 3.1:
>
> '''>>> concat('hello','world') == 'hello world'
> True
> '''
I see. Thank for the concern.
M.
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#!/usr/bin/env python
'''
>>> concat('hello','world')
'hello world'
'''
from __future__ import unicode_literals
def concat( first, second ):
return first + ' ' +
Hello all.
I'm using Python 2.6.4 and Python 3.1.1.
My wish is to code in a 3.1-compliant way using 2.6, so I'm importing
the __future__ module.
I've found a funny thing comparing the two folliwing snippets that
differ for one line only, that is the position of __future__ import
(before or after th