Message223975
| Author |
Chris.Bruner |
| Recipients |
Chris.Bruner, docs@python, paul.j3, r.david.murray |
| Date |
2014年07月25日.17:29:45 |
| SpamBayes Score |
-1.0 |
| Marked as misclassified |
Yes |
| Message-id |
<D7370F46-3EA7-4AA1-BBFA-CA901B14A09C@gmail.com> |
| In-reply-to |
<1406259723.26.0.0398775751208.issue22049@psf.upfronthosting.co.za> |
| Content |
Yes, I know. My function just sees '1', but I think it should see '1 2 3' so that it can figure out what to do. That's impossible (well, impossible without saving state between calls) when it sees the arguments piecemeal.
Sent from my iPhone
> On Jul 24, 2014, at 9:42 PM, paul j3 <report@bugs.python.org> wrote:
>
>
> paul j3 added the comment:
>
> Note that
>
> '-t 1 2 3'.split()
>
> becomes
>
> ['-t', '1', '2', '3']
>
> Your 'type' function sees those 3 strings individually. Try printing 'string' the first thing in your function to see what we mean.
>
> ----------
> nosy: +paul.j3
>
> _______________________________________
> Python tracker <report@bugs.python.org>
> <http://bugs.python.org/issue22049>
> _______________________________________ |
|