(I mistakenly replied in private. here is a copy for the py3000 mailing list.)


Good evening!

On 5/26/07, Jim Jewett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> You're missing "here is this neat code from sourceforge", or "Here is
> something I cut-and-pasted from ASPN".  If those use something outside
> of ASCII, that's fine -- so long as they tell you about it.
>
> If you didn't realize it was using non-ASCII (or even that it could),
> and the author didn't warn you -- then that is an appropriate time for
> the interpreter to warn you that things aren't as you expect.

I fail to see your point. Why should the interpreter warn you?

There is nothing wrong to have programs written with identifiers using
accented letters, cyrillic alphabet, morse code?! Why should you be
warned? If the programmer who wrote the code decided to use its own
language to name some of the identifiers ... then.. bygones.

 If you have an actual requirement that everything should be ascii
then do not copy code off ASPN without first sanitizing it and do not
copy neat code from sf.net from people you hardly know without doing a
full ascii-compliance and security review.

but if the code you copy off somewhere else does what you need it to
do... then why do you want to force the author of this code generously
donated to you to downgrade his expressiveness by having to rewrite
all his code to reach ascii purity?

Guillaume
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