Sorry, wasn't asking you to solve this issue. Just noting that python programmers are likely to be more used to seeing stuff 'incorrectly' coloured as keywords. I know I am used to accepting this when writing python. So including 'extra' keywords for colouring is not such a big deal IMHO..
Thomas
On 23/01/13 11:17, Lex Trotman wrote:
On 23 January 2013 20:14, Thomas Young thomasyoung@free.fr wrote:
Hi Lex,
For myself, yes, I'd definitely say that missing keywords is worse than extras. And just including all of these as keywords seems fine.
As an aside note that I quite often find myself getting stuff like local variables and parameters coloured as keywords in wing, not because of differences in python versions, but because it actually seems to be ok to 'hide' built in stuff with your own definitions.
Not much we can do for that, we only know identifier names, not what they have been/not been defined as. And I might add neither does Python until runtime.
See, for example, the following:
python 2.7.3 (default, Sep 26 2012, 21:51:14) [GCC 4.7.2] on linux2 Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
False = True
Which is probably why they are keywords in Python 3, so this is illegal :)
Cheers Lex
print False
True
(I wouldn't do this in real code, but in many situations it is quite convenient to not worry about trying to avoid name clashes with built in tags!)
Best regards,
Thomas
On 23/01/13 06:17, Lex Trotman wrote:
Hi All,
We have only one Python filetype, but Python has two versions.
There are some differences between them in terms of keywords and builtins.
For example exec, nonlocal, True, False and None are not keywords for Python 2 but are for 3.
And print is a keyword for 2 but not for 3.
There are similar changes to the builtins.
At the moment True, False and None are in the keyword list but exec and nonlocal are not. There is a PR to remove True, False and None.
Since Python 3 is gaining ground I suggest that it would be better to have an aggregate of both Pythons for both keywords and builtins. Whilst that is wrong for both, I think missing keywords is worse than extras.
What do other Python users think?
Cheers Lex _______________________________________________ Devel mailing list Devel@lists.geany.org https://lists.geany.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/devel
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