> and rejected some others:
> SR 3126  Remove Implicit String Concatenation         Jewett

I had high hopes for this one.  Cie le vie.

I did not see octal literals on your list.  FWIW, I'm -1 on the proposal.  The 
current situation is only a minor nuisance.  While I prefer to see octal 
literal support dropped entirely, I would rather live with the 0123 form than 
add more complexity with a non-standard format and a set of warnings for 
decimals with leading zeros:  date(2007, 05, 09).


> 3128 (BList) -- I'll leave this for Raymond Hettinger to review.

After looking at the source, I think this has almost zero chance for replacing 
list().  There is too much value in a simple C API, low space overhead for 
small lists, good performance is common use cases, and having performance that 
is easily understood.  The BList implementation lacks these virtues and 
trades-off a little performance is common cases for much better performance in 
uncommon cases.  As a Py3.0 PEP, I think it can be rejected.

Depending on its success as a third-party module, it still has a chance for 
inclusion in the collections module.  The essential criteria for that is 
whether it is a superior choice for some real-world use cases.  I've scanned my 
own code and found no instances where BList would have been preferable to a 
regular list.  However, that scan has a selection bias because it doesn't 
reflect what I would have written had BList been available.  So, after a few 
months, I intend to poll comp.lang.python for BList success stories.  If they 
exist, then I have no problem with inclusion in the collections module.  After 
all, its learning curve is near zero -- the only cost is the clutter factor 
stemming from indecision about the most appropriate data structure for a given 
task.

> I'm still hoping Raymond will check his draft PEPs in by Sunday night.

Sorry for the delay, I've been fully task saturated and the PEP writing has 
been slowed by the need to explore the ideas more fully.

The PEP for eliminating __del__ seemed straight-forward at the outset, but the 
use case you presented doesn't seem to have a clean substitute (as it requires 
the object to be alive to finalize it).  Other use cases do have a clean 
solution.  So, I'll go forward with the PEP but am a bit disheartened that it 
is going to have to advise try/finally or somesuch for the harder cases.

The information attributes idea is going well and is sticking close to the 
original presentation except that I've now seen the wisdom of modifying 
isinstance() to let some objects fake or proxy a type that they don't inherit 
from.



Raymond
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