Thanks for all repliers:
@Tony & @Cameron, I do know related stuffs about the dunder methods, and your
explanation just make it to be more clear, thank you!
@Roel, you just caught everyone here, we do miss it even though we know it and
use it regularly!
@Clara
> its both, depending on how you're
```python
>>> class A:
... def __init__(self):
... pass
...
>>> A.__init__
>>> a = A()
>>> a.__init__
>
```
On many books and even the official documents, it seems that many authors
prefer to call `__init__` as a "method" rather than a "function".
The book PYTHON CRASH COURSE mentioned th
The following code won’t be allowed in Java, but in python, it works fine:
```python
class A:
A = 3
def __init__(self):
print(self.A)
def p(self):
print(self.A)
self.A += 1
class B(A):
def __init__(self):
print(2)
self.p()
super().
Lars:
> I totally understand your reasoning here, but in some way it follows the unix
> philosophy: Do only one thing, but do that good.
I understand, python is not strongly typed, so `sys.exit` will be able to
accept any types parameters rather than just integer.
In order to handle such “other”
Chris:
> It doesn't actually take a list of arguments; the square brackets
indicate that arg is optional here.
Oh, I see, it seems that I mistunderstood the document.
> but for anything more complicated, just print and then exit.
> It's worth noting, by the way, that sys.exit("error message") wil
Currently, I use `sys.exit([arg])` for exiting program and it works fine.
As described in the document:
> If another type of object is passed, None is equivalent to passing zero, and
> any other object is printed to stderr and results in an exit code of 1.
However, if I want to exit the program w
Thank you for your workarounds, Mark Bourne.
`metavar` argument should be sufficient for infrequent use scenarios, and I
will consider to use the custom help formatter if necessary.
>>> That's a bit closer to what you asked for, since the required argument
>>> shown in the error message doesn't
If we have the following code:
```
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="test")
parser.add_argument('path')
```
Run it without args, will get error message:
```
usage: test.py [-h] path
test.py: error: the following arguments are required: path
```
However, I hope the message can be as th
Currently, we have following PEP:
PEP 8: E114 indentation is not a multiple of 4 (comment)
However, I wonder how many people are using 2 spaces as their code indentation
in projects? Should it be nesserary for us to change this PEP from “multiple of
4” to “multiple of 2”?
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