Message231187
| Author |
crkirkwood |
| Recipients |
bignose, crkirkwood, docs@python, georg.brandl, r.david.murray, terry.reedy |
| Date |
2014年11月14日.21:25:15 |
| SpamBayes Score |
-1.0 |
| Marked as misclassified |
Yes |
| Message-id |
<06ea01d000516945ドルafb03ドルbd10f10$@us> |
| In-reply-to |
<1415999014.71.0.778448837562.issue22843@psf.upfronthosting.co.za> |
| Content |
Cool
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Terry J. Reedy [mailto:report@bugs.python.org]
>Sent: Friday, November 14, 2014 1:04 PM
>To: crk@godblessthe.us
>Subject: [issue22843] doc error: 6.2.4. Match Objects
>
>
>Terry J. Reedy added the comment:
>
>David is correct that the current phrasing is correct. The phase 'x has
>a boolean value of True' means 'bool(x) is True', which is always true
>for match objects, as well as for non-zero numbers, non-empty
>collections, and many other things. This does *not* imply equality
>between the object and its boolean value. In fact, nearly all objects
>are not equal to their boolean value. Clayton could just as well as
>have written "blah = 'a'" or "blah = 1 + 1j" and gotten the name non-
>surprising result.
>
>There is nothing special about boolean values in this respect. The
>string value of x is str(x) and in general, x != str(x). (This also
>sometimes confuses people.) Similarly, if x has an integral value
>int(x), it does not necessarily equal that value: int(3.1459) != 3.
>
>I think the doc is fine as is. The fact that "3 is considered to be '3'
>in a display context" does not mean that we do not write "the string
>value of 3 is '3'". It is fundamental to Python that essentially all
>objects o have a string value str(o) and a boolean value bool(o) and
>that those mappings are sometimes used automatically for display and
>logic.
>
>----------
>nosy: +terry.reedy
>
>_______________________________________
>Python tracker <report@bugs.python.org>
><http://bugs.python.org/issue22843>
>_______________________________________ |
|