Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka+cpyt...@gmail.com> added the comment:

Actually the precedence was a warning for an assert like:

    assert(x % 2 == 0, "x is odd")

Currently it is the only syntax warning produced by the compiler.

> 1. Why 'chech' instead of 'check'?

Just a typo replicated with a copy-paste.

> 2. Will chech_index catch "[1,2] [3,4]"? (I am guessing that is the intent.)

Yes, it is. It could be extended to catch also "['foo','bar'] ['baz']".

> 3. Does Syntax Warning stop compilation, or at least execution, as at a >>> 
> prompt?

No, it is just a warning unless you run Python with -Werror.

This patch was inspired by usability improvements in GCC 8 [1]. I haven't 
created a pull request because I have doubts about that this should be in the 
compiler rather of a third-party linter. But if several other core developers 
will support this idea I'll continue working in this direction.

[1] https://developers.redhat.com/blog/2018/03/15/gcc-8-usability-improvements/

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