Hi, There was the discussion about vector, etc...
I think I have a frustration about chaining things easily in python in the stdlib where many libs like orm do it great. Here an example : The code is useless, just to show the idea >>> a = [1,2,3] >>> a.append(4) >>> a.sort() >>> c = max(a) + 1 I would be happy to have >>> [1,2,3].append(4)::sort()::max() +1 It makes things very easy to read: first create list, then append 4, then sort, then get the max. To resume, the idea is to apply via a new operator (::, .., etc...) the following callable on the previous object. It's clearly for standalone object or after a method call when the return is None (there is fluent `.` when there is a return value) >> object::callable() = callable(object) >> object(arg)::callable = callable(object(arg)) def callable(arg1,arg2): pass >> object::callable(arg) == callable(object, arg) The idea is to use quite everything as first argument of any callable. I do not know if it was already discussed, and if it would be technically doable. Nice Day Jimmy _______________________________________________ Python-ideas mailing list Python-ideas@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-ideas Code of Conduct: http://python.org/psf/codeofconduct/