if then a more convenient way might be found to naturally remove and return
the list

maybe it was not included as one might want to remove the list only

x = [1]
x.remove(1)

as opposed to

x = [1]
x.remove(1)
new_list = x

i was looking for like

x = [1]
x.remove(1).return()

ps. list is was demo illustrative var

Abdur-Rahmaan Janhangeer
https://github.com/Abdur-rahmaanJ

On Thu, 17 May 2018, 07:01 Ned Batchelder, <n...@nedbatchelder.com> wrote:

> On 5/16/18 10:41 PM, Abdur-Rahmaan Janhangeer wrote:
> > why is x = list.remove(elem) not return the list?
> >
> >
> Methods in Python usually do one of two things: 1) mutate the object and
> return None; or 2) leave the object alone and return a new object.  This
> helps make it clear which methods mutate and which don't.  Since .remove
> mutates the list, it returns None.
>
> --Ned.
> --
> https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
>
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