Comment by mathisfun123
5 days ago
> same member value within the same function body are stable
Did you miss the part where I explained to you there's no way to identify that it's a member variable?
> Nobody in the real world expects this behaviour
As has already been explained to you by a sibling comment you are in fact wrong and there are in fact plenty of people in the real world who do actually expect this behavior.
So I'll repeat myself: lots of hottakes from just pure. Unadulterated, possibly willful, ignorance.
The above is a very thick response that doesn't address the parent's points, just sweeps them under the rag with "that's just how it was designed/it works".
"Did you miss the part where I explained to you there's no way to identify that it's a member variable?"
No, you you did miss the case where that in itself can be considered nuts - or at least an unfortunate early decision.
"this just how things are dunn around diz here parts" is not an argument.
> No, you you did miss the case where that in itself can be considered nuts - or at least an unfortunate early decision.
This is not a side implementation detail, that they got wrong, this is a fundamental design goal of Python. You can find that nuts, but then just don't use Python, because that is (one of) that things, that make Python Python.
> considered nuts - or at least an unfortunate early decision
Please explain to us then how exactly you would infer a variable with an arbitrary name is actually a reference to the class instance in an interpreted language.
>Please explain to us then how exactly you would infer a variable with an arbitrary name is actually a reference to the class instance in an interpreted language.
Did I stutter when I wrote about "an unfortunate early decision"? Who said it has to be "an arbitrary name"?
Even so, you could add a bloody marker announcing an arbitrary name (which 99% would be self anyway) as so, as an instruction to the interpreter. If it fails, it fails, like countless other things that can fail during runtime in Python today.
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