Re: Should Python raise a warning for mutable default arguments?
On Fri, 22 Aug 2008 14:39:11 -0700, Emile van Sebille wrote:
	
		
Augmented assignment: x ?= y is not always the same as x = x ? y.
Repeated string addition can be very slow. For that matter, so can list
addition.
Inserting at the beginning of lists is slow.
Everything about unicode is a Gotcha! *wink*
Raw strings are not designed for Windows paths, they're designed for
regexes. Consequently, you can't write the following:
r'C:\dir\'
list.sort() and list.reverse() return None.
sorted() returns a list, but reversed() returns an iterator.
urllib2.urlopen () will automatically detect the proxy in your environment
and use that. That's usually a feature, but sometimes it can be a gotcha.
urllib2 doesn't work well with some HTTPS proxies. This is, I believe, a
known bug, but until it is fixed, it can be a gotcha.
--
Steven
							
						
					On Fri, 22 Aug 2008 14:39:11 -0700, Emile van Sebille wrote:
			
			
			
				Dan wrote:
	
		
Hmmm, OK -- mutable defaults, integer division, name mangling...
>
I'd think decimal precision is more a general problem than a python
problem, but still one that throws newbies...
>
Any other ideas for gotcha's (as opposed to faqs)?
	
			
			
			
				>I'd suggest that at the
>end of the tutorial, when people have a better general idea of how
>Python works, there would be a Python Gotchas section.
>>
>>
	>end of the tutorial, when people have a better general idea of how
>Python works, there would be a Python Gotchas section.
>>
>>
>
I'd think decimal precision is more a general problem than a python
problem, but still one that throws newbies...
>
Any other ideas for gotcha's (as opposed to faqs)?
Repeated string addition can be very slow. For that matter, so can list
addition.
Inserting at the beginning of lists is slow.
Everything about unicode is a Gotcha! *wink*
Raw strings are not designed for Windows paths, they're designed for
regexes. Consequently, you can't write the following:
r'C:\dir\'
list.sort() and list.reverse() return None.
sorted() returns a list, but reversed() returns an iterator.
urllib2.urlopen () will automatically detect the proxy in your environment
and use that. That's usually a feature, but sometimes it can be a gotcha.
urllib2 doesn't work well with some HTTPS proxies. This is, I believe, a
known bug, but until it is fixed, it can be a gotcha.
--
Steven
Comment