> That is technically correct, you could do that. That's a good example of > the syntax of the `if` expression, but it's a bad example of where to > use it: > > (1) it only works in Python 2.5 or better; and > > (2) experienced Python programmers will laugh at you :) > > with all due respect to Alan who suggested it. It really is an > unnecessarily complicated and verbose way of doing a simple assignment, > nearly as bad as writing this: > > if len(mystring) == 0: > n = 0 > else: > n = len(mystring) > > > instead of just > > n = len(mystring) > > Hey Everybody,
Thank you for the rich discussion and making me a better python programmer! Between the new topics that I have learned in Python and Django from documentation, experimentation, and this list, I think my IQ has gone up a couple of points! I'm at a point where I can do most things in Python (maybe) , now I'm looking to do them succinctly and elegantly. For instance, I had about 10 - 15 lines of code to do this before with a bunch of loops and if blocks, I distilled the product down to this: answerDict=dict(map(lambda x: (str(x[1]),x[0]),map(lambda x: \ x.values(),Answer.objects.filter(fk_questionSet=1). \ filter(fk_question=1).values('widgetAnswer').order_by(). \ annotate(widgetCount=Count('widgetAnswer'))))) So instead of my python code doing the "leg work", I have the Django ORM and that underlying DB do the work. Also, I leveraged lambda functions and maps to coerce the data in to the right format. Pretty cool IMHO. And I turn it over to the group to see if there is any improvements or gotchas that I missed. Thanks and Thanks in advance, Tino _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor