On 5/3/2010 9:38 AM, Samuel Williams wrote:
Dear Chris,

Thanks for reading further into the site.

Yes, it is complicated to provide a good comparison. It isn't always
accurate and I welcome feedback.

Please be aware that orange does not mean problem - it simply means
take note that there may be potential issues that you need to
consider. It is highly subjective, so I appreciate your feedback. The
red dot is when there is definitely an issue that needs to be taken
into consideration. It isn't "Okay, Warning, Error" because it isn't
possible to make this kind of judgement without being omnipotent.

There are several reason why I decided to rate the syntax as not
being simple. 1) Indentation model is not appreciated by everyone - I

Appreciation is orthogonal to simplicity.

think its a good model, but feedback from some other people has been
that they don't like it. Also, I've had perfectly good Python code
fall to bits after editing in a different editor. I'm not saying that

I view this is a consequence of simplicity. Python does not have the complexity of usually redundant (but possibly contradictory) backup indication of structure. So to me, you are rating Python as not simple because it is too simple for some people for some purposes ;-).

this was the fault of Python, but in an educational context it might
be a problem, since people are fairly limited and don't understand
these issues. 2) I don't think that the list comprehension integrates
well with the rest of the language. It is an additional syntactic
construct which seems to be separate from the rest of the language.
It would be nice if list comprehension was implemented in a way that
was more general, using a general closure syntax for example. This is

List comprehensions have been generalized in Python 3 to generator expressions and list/set/dict comprehensions. I do not know whether you rate Py2 or Py3 at your site, but for 'should I learn this language' comparision, Py3 would be fairest.

just my opinion, and it might not be valid (I don't research this
point very heavily).

I appreciate that in general the Python syntax is good and concise.
It is hard. Some teacher might want to consider these issues more
carefully. Do you think I should change that spot to green? I don't
have a problem with doing that, as long as it makes sense.

Thanks for providing the syntax images, they are very interesting.

I chose Python over Perl (over a decade ago) partly because it seemed to me them to have a simpler, more consistent object model and system. Since then, the user class system has been integrated with the builtin type system, and the older separate class system eliminated in Python3, which, again, simplifies things.

It is perhaps worth noting that Python's object model, and consequent function calling protocol, dates back at least to Barbara Liskov's CLU language.

Terry Jan Reedy

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