Python Quotations

A.M. Kuchling

Quotations from the Python community

We will perhaps eventually be writing only small modules which are identified by name as they are used to build larger ones, so that devices like indentation, rather than delimiters, might become feasible for expressing local structure in the source language.

Donald E. Knuth, "Structured Programming with goto Statements", Computing Surveys, Vol 6 No 4, Dec. 1974

Python's syntax succeeds in combining the mistakes of Lisp and Fortran. I do not construe that as progress.

Larry Wall, May 12 2004

Some rejected alternate names for "Monty Python's Flying Circus":

1 2 3 / It's Them! / Arthur Megapode's Flying Circus / The Horrible Earnest Megapode / The Panic Show / The Plastic Mac Show / Ow! It's Colin Plint! / Vaseline Review / Vaseline Parade / The Keen Show / Brian's Flying Circus / The Year of the Stoat / Cynthia Fellatio's Flying Circus / Owl Stretching Time / The Whizzo Easishow! (Guaranteed to last 1/2 hour! Money back if not!)

From Kim "Howard" Johnson's Life Before and After Monty Python. It's interesting to contemplate what Python would have been called if one of these names had been chosen.

Anybody else on the list got an opinion? Should I change the language or not?

Guido van Rossum, 28 Dec 1991

in-any-case-the-best-christmas-present-i-got-today!-ly y'rs - tim

Tim Peters, 29 Dec 1991 [First occurrence of Tim Peters's long-phrase-ly idiom.]

but-i'm-not-even-motivated-enough-to-finish-this-sig-

Tim Peters, 20 Dec 2000

Ha -- you have done me the favor of underestimating my ignorance <smile>.

Tim Peters, 30 Dec 1991

I prefer (all things being equal) regularity/orthogonality and logical syntax/semantics in a language because there is less to have to remember. (Of course I know all things are NEVER really equal!)

Guido van Rossum, 6 Dec 1991

The details of that silly code are irrelevant.

Tim Peters, 4 Mar 1992

Frankly, I'd rather not try to compete with Perl in the areas where Perl is best -- it's a battle that's impossible to win, and I don't think it is a good idea to strive for the number of obscure options and shortcuts that Perl has acquired through the years.

Guido van Rossum, 7 Jul 1992

Python is a truly wonderful language. When somebody comes up with a good idea it takes about 1 minute and five lines to program something that almost does what you want. Then it takes only an hour to extend the script to 300 lines, after which it still does almost what you want.

Jack Jansen, 8 Jul 1992

If you have a browser from CERN's WWW project (World-Wide Web, a distributed hypertext system) you can browse a WWW hypertext version of the manual...

Guido van Rossum, 19 Nov 1992 [First mention of the Web on python-list.]

Just a success note for Guido and the list: Python 0.9.9, stdwin, readline, gmp, and md5 all go up on linux 0.99 pl11 without much problems.

Allan Bailey, 2 Aug 1993 [First mention of Linux on python-list.]

Rule: "You shouldn't have to open up a black box and take it apart to find out you've been pushing the wrong buttons!" Corollary: "Every black box should have at least TWO blinking lights: "Paper Jam" and "Service Required" (or equivalent)."

Steven D. Majewski, 9 Sep 1993

We've been through a couple of syntax changes, but I have sort of assumed that by the time we get to version 1.0 release, the language, (if not the implementation) will essentially be stable.

Steven D. Majewski, 14 Sep 1993

"Python tricks" is a tough one, cuz the language is so clean. E.g., C makes an art of confusing pointers with arrays and strings, which leads to lotsa neat pointer tricks; APL mistakes everything for an array, leading to neat one-liners; and Perl confuses everything period, making each line a joyous adventure <wink>.

Tim Peters, 16 Sep 1993

I've seen Python criticized as "ugly" precisely because it doesn't have a trick-based view of the world. In many ways, it's a dull language, borrowing solid old concepts from many other languages & styles: boring syntax, unsurprising semantics, few automatic coercions, etc etc. But that's one of the things I like about it.

Tim Peters, 16 Sep 1993

One of the things that makes it interesting, is exactly how much Guido has managed to exploit that one implementation trick of 'namespaces'.

Steven D. Majewski, 17 Sep 1993

Anyone familiar with Modula-3 should appreciate the difference between a layered approach, with generic Rd/Wr types, and the Python 'C with foam padding' approach.

John Redford, 24 Nov 1993

People simply will not agree on what should and shouldn't be "an error", and once exception-handling mechanisms are introduced to give people a choice, they will far less agree on what to do with them.

Tim Peters, 17 Dec 1993

Note that because of its semantics, 'del' can't be a function: "del a" deletes 'a' from the current namespace. A function can't delete something from the calling namespace (except when written by Steve Majewski :-).

Guido van Rossum, 1 Aug 1994

I don't know a lot about this artificial life stuff -- but I'm suspicious of anything Newsweek gets goofy about -- and I suspect its primary use is as another money extraction tool to be applied by ai labs to the department of defense (and more power to 'em).

Nevertheless in wondering why free software is so good these days it occurred to me that the propagation of free software is one gigantic artificial life evolution experiment, but the metaphor isn't perfect.

Programs are thrown out into the harsh environment, and the bad ones die. The good ones adapt rapidly and become very robust in short order.

The only problem with the metaphor is that the process isn't random at all. Python chooses to include Tk's genes; Linux decides to make itself more suitable for symbiosis with X, etcetera.

Free software is artificial life, but better.

Aaron Watters, 29 Sep 1994

I claim complete innocence and ignorance! It must have been Tim. I wouldn't know a Trondheim Hammer if it fell on my foot!

Steve Majewski, 10 Jan 1995

(Aieee! Yet another thing on my TODO pile!)

A.M. Kuchling, 10 Jan 1995

[After someone wrote "...assignment capability, a la djikstra"] Ehh, the poor old man's name is Dijkstra. I should know, "ij" is a well known digraph in the Dutch language. And before someone asks the obvious: his famous "P and V" names for semaphores are derived for the Dutch words "Passeer" and "Verlaat", or "Pass" and "Leave". And no, I haven't met him (although he did work at CWI back in the fifties when it was called, as it should still be today, Mathematical Centre). he currently lives in Austin, Texas I believe. (While we're at it... does anybody remember the Dijkstra font for Macintoshes? It was a scanned version of his handwriting. I believe Luca Cardelli scanned it -- the author of Obliq, a somewhat Python-like distributed language built on Modula-3. I could go on forever... :-)

Guido van Rossum, 19 Jan 1995

As always, I'll leave it to a volunteer to experiment with this.

Guido van Rossum, 20 Jan 1995

Non-masochists, please delete this article NOW.

Aaron Watters, 20 Jan 1995

If Perl weren't around, I'd probably be using Python right now.

Tom Christiansen in comp.lang.perl, 2 Jun 1995

GUI stuff is supposed to be hard. It builds character.

Jim Ahlstrom, at one of the early Python workshops

>VERY cool mod, Peter. I'll be curious to see GvR's reaction to your syntax.

Hm.

Nick Seidenman and Guido van Rossum, 1 Aug 1996

Python is an experiment in how much freedom programmers need. Too much freedom and nobody can read another's code; too little and expressiveness is endangered.

Guido van Rossum, 13 Aug 1996

[On regression testing] Another approach is to renounce all worldly goods and retreat to a primitive cabin in Montana, where you can live a life of purity, unpolluted by technological change. But now and then you can send out little packages....

Aaron Watters

Ah, you're a recent victim of forceful evangelization. Write your own assert module, use it, and come back in a few months to tell me whether it really caught 90% of your bugs.

Guido van Rossum, 7 Feb 1997

The larger scientific computing centers generally have a "theory" division and a "actually uses the computer" <wink> division. The theory division generally boasts some excellent theoreticians and designers, while the other division generally boasts some excellent physical scientists who simply want to get their work done. In most labs I've seen, the two divisions hate each others' guts (or, rarely, blissfully ignore each other), & the politics is so thick you float on it even after they embed your feet in cement blocks (hence even the simple relief of death is denied you <wink>).

Tim Peters, 25 Mar 1997

In one particular way the conflict is fundamental & eternal: the "working scientists" generally understand the hardware du jour perfectly, and passionately resent any attempt to prevent them from fiddling with it directly -- while the theory folks are forever inventing new ways to hide the hardware du jour. That two groups can both be so right and so wrong at the same time is my seventh proof for the existence of God ...

Tim Peters, 25 Mar 1997

You're going to be in a minority - you're coming to Python programming from a language which offers you a lot more in the way of comfortable operations than Python, instead of coming from medieval torture chambers like C or Fortran, which offer so much less.

Andrew Mullhaupt, 26 Jun 1997

...although Python uses an obsolete approach to memory management, it is a good implementation of that approach, as opposed to S, which uses a combination of bad implementation and demented design decisions to arrive at what may very well be the worst memory behavior of any actually useful program.

Andrew Mullhaupt, 26 Jun 1997

I suggested holding a "Python Object Oriented Programming Seminar", but the acronym was unpopular.

Joseph Strout, 28 Feb 1997

Strangely enough I saw just such a beast at the grocery store last night. Starbucks sells Javachip. (It's ice cream, but that shouldn't be an obstacle for the Java marketing people.)

Jeremy Hylton, 29 Apr 1997

A little girl goes into a pet show and asks for a wabbit. The shop keeper looks down at her, smiles and says:

"Would you like a lovely fluffy little white rabbit, or a cutesy wootesly little brown rabbit?"

"Actually", says the little girl, "I don't think my python would notice."

Told by Nick Leaton, 4 Dec 1996

When I originally designed Perl 5's OO, I thought about a lot of this stuff, and chose the explicit object model of Python as being the least confusing. So far I haven't seen a good reason to change my mind on that.

Larry Wall, 27 Feb 1997 on perl5-porters

PSA 1996 Budget
---------------
Income:
$1,093,276.54  'Guido for President' 
                 Campaign Contributions(1)
$        3.12  Milk Money Extortion Program
$    2,934.07  PSA Memberships
-------------
$1,096,213.73  Total Income

Expenses:
$  652,362.55  Monty Python Licencing Fees (2)
$   10,876.45  Pre-Release 2 Week Vacations (3)
$  369,841.59  Post-Release 2 Week Vacations (3)
$       15.01  Alien Abduction Insurance
$   62,541.72  Python Web Site Maintenance
$      554.65  Great Comfort Cream
-------------
$1,096,191.97  Total Expenses
$      (21.76) Total Profit (Loss)

Notes:

(1) Many of you many not be aware of the fabulously successful 'Guido for President' Campaign. While Guido has no interest in being the president, the PSA thought it would be a cool way to collect money. The centerpiece of the campaign featured an attractive offer to spend the night in Guido's spare bedroom in exchange for a $50,000.00 contribution. (Mark Lutz stayed TWICE!)

(2) Since the proliferation of Monty Python related names (Python, Monty, Grail, Eric-the-Half-a-Compiler, et al.) has increased over the past year, the PSA felt it would be wise to licencing the Python name to forestall any lawsuits. An added benefit is that John Cleese is teaching Guido how to walk funny.

(3) Pre-Release vacations are spent in the Catskills. Post-Release vacations are spent in the Bahamas. Guido is currently working on a system which will allow him to make more releases of Python; thus octupling the number of vacations he takes in a year.

Matthew Lewis Carroll Smith, 4 Apr 1997

I mean, just take a look at Joe Strout's brilliant little "python for beginners" page. Replace all print-statements with sys.stdout.write( string.join(map(str, args)) + "\n") and you surely won't get any new beginners. And That Would Be A Very Bad Thing.

Fredrik Lundh, 27 Aug 1996

Ya, ya, ya, except ... if I were built out of KSR chips, I'd be running at 25 or 50 MHz, and would be wrong about ALMOST EVERYTHING almost ALL THE TIME just due to being a computer! Think about it -- when's the last time you spent 20 hours straight debugging your son/wife/friend/neighbor/dog/ferret/snake? And they still fell over anyway? Except in a direction you've never seen before each time you try it? The easiest way to tell you're dealing with a computer is when the other side keeps making the same moronic misteakes over and misteakes over and misteakes over and misteakes over and misteakes over and misteakes CTRL-C again.

Tim Peters, 30 Apr 1997

BTW, a member of the ANSI C committee once told me that the only thing rand is used for in C code is to decide whether to pick up the axe or throw the dwarf, and if that's true I guess "the typical libc rand" is adequate for all but the most fanatic of gamers <wink>.

Tim Peters, 21 June 1997.

Things in Python are very clear, but are harder to find than the secrets of wizards. Things in Perl are easy to find, but look like arcane spells to invoke magic.

Mike Meyer, 6 Nov 1997

Indeed, as Palin has come to understand, being part of Python means never really knowing what may lurk around the corner.

"We've never really followed any rules at all with Python," he said. "We're a spontaneous lot. It's more fun that way."

Michael Palin, quoted from a Reuters/Variety news item titled "Rare Python Reunion", Jan 15 1998.

Python is an excellent language for learning object orientation. (It also happens to be my favorite OO scripting language.)

Sriram Srinivasan — Advanced Perl Programming

The point is that newbies almost always read more into the semantics of release than are specified, so it's worthwile to be explicit about how little is being said <wink>.

Tim Peters, 12 Feb 1998

Ah! "Never mind" to a bunch of what I said before (this editor can't move backwards <wink>).

Tim Peters, 12 Feb 1998

After 1.5 years of Python, I'm still discovering richness (and still unable to understand what the hell Jim Fulton is talking about).

Gordon McMillan, 13 Mar 1998

Tabs are good, spaces are bad and mixing the two just means that your motives are confused and that you don't use enough functions.

John J. Lehmann, 19 Mar 1998

... but whenever optimization comes up, people get sucked into debates about exciting but elaborate schemes not a one of which ever gets implemented; better to get an easy 2% today than dream about 100% forever.

Tim Peters, 22 Mar 1998

I've been playing spoilsport in an attempt to get tabnanny.py working, but now that there's absolutely no reason to continue with this, the amount of my life I'm willing to devote to it is unbounded <0.9 wink>.

Tim Peters, 30 Mar 1998

Python is a little weak in forcing encapsulation. It isn't made for bondage and domination environments.

Paul Prescod, 30 Mar 1998

One of my first big programming assignments as a student of computer science was a source formatter for Pascal. The assignment was designed to show us the real-life difficulties of group programming projects. It succeeded perhaps too well. For a long time, I was convinced that source code formatters were a total waste of time, and decided to write beautiful code that no automatic formatter could improve upon. In fact, I would intentionally write code that formatters could only make worse.

Guido van Rossum, 31 Mar 1998

You need to build a system that is futureproof; it's no good just making a modular system. You need to realize that your system is just going to be a module in some bigger system to come, and so you have to be part of something else, and it's a bit of a way of life.

Tim Berners-Lee, at the WWW7 conference

From gotos to the evolution of life in 10 posts; that's comp.lang.python for you!

A.M. Kuchling, 4 Apr 1998

This is Python! If we didn't care what code looked like, most of us would probably be hacking in some version of Lisp -- which already covered most of Python's abstract semantics way back when Guido was just a wee snakelet frolicking in the lush Amsterdam jungle.

Tim Peters, 24 Apr 1998

The infinities aren't contagious except in that they often appear that way due to their large size.

Tim Peters on the IEEE 754 floating point standard, 27 Apr 1998

The "of course, while I have no problem with this at all, it's surely too much for a lesser being" flavor of argument always rings hollow to me. Are you personally confused by the meanings for "+" that exist today? Objecting to the variations is a different story; I'm wondering whether you personally stumble over them in practice. I don't; Steven doesn't; I doubt that you do either. I'm betting that almost nobody ever does, in which case those "less nimble colleagues and students" must be supernaturally feeble to merit such concern.

Tim Peters, 29 Apr 1998

"Ideally, IMO, two messages with the same name should have the same meaning but possibly different implementations. Of course, "meaning" is somewhat relative, but the notion that two messages with the same name should have the same 'meaning' is very useful."

"Like clothes.launder() vs money.launder(), or shape.draw() vs blood.draw(), or matrix.norm() vs hi.norm() <wink>? I'm afraid English thrives on puns, and the same word routinely means radically different things across application areas. Therefore, to insist that a word have "one true meaning" in a programming language is insisting that the language cater to one true application domain."

Jim Fulton and Tim Peters, in a discussion of rich comparisons, 29 Apr 1998

Indeed, when I design my killer language, the identifiers "foo" and "bar" will be reserved words, never used, and not even mentioned in the reference manual. Any program using one will simply dump core without comment. Multitudes will rejoice.

Tim Peters, 29 Apr 1998

Too little freedom makes life confusingly clumsy; too much, clumsily confusing. Luckily, the tension between freedom and restraint eventually gets severed by Guido's Razor.

Tim Peters, 29 Apr 1998

In other words, I'm willing to see dark corners added to the language, as long as I don't have to go into them myself.

A.M. Kuchling, 29 Apr 1998

This argument is specious. What on earth would it mean to compare an object you created with another object from someone else's code unless you knew exactly what each object's semantics were? Do you really want to ask if my abstract syntax tree is less then your HTTP connection object?

Jeremy Hylton, in a discussion of rich comparisons, 29 Apr 1998

Two things I learned for sure during a particularly intense acid trip in my own lost youth: (1) everything is a trivial special case of something else; and, (2) death is a bunch of blue spheres.

Tim Peters, 1 May 1998

Well, they will be: "<" will mean what everyone thinks it means when applied to builtin types, and will mean whatever __lt__ makes it mean otherwise, except when __lt__ isn't defined but __cmp__ is in which case it will mean whatever __cmp__ makes it mean, except when neither __lt__ or __cmp__ are defined in which case it's still unsettled. I think. Or isn't that what you meant by "clearly defined"?

Tim Peters, 6 May 1998

You write a great program, regardless of language, by redoing it over & over & over & over, until your fingers bleed and your soul is drained. But if you tell newbies that, they might decide to go off and do something sensible, like bomb defusing<wink>.

Tim Peters, 5 Jun 1998

OO styles help in part because they make it easier to redo large parts over, or, when the moon is shining just right, to steal large parts from someone else. Python helps in many additional ways regardless of style, not least of which in that it hurts less to throw away 50 lines of code than 5,000 <0.5 wink>. The pains, and joys, of programming are qualitatively the same under Python. There's less pain less often, and joy comes quicker. And that's worth a whole lot.

Tim Peters, 5 Jun 1998

I've had a DBA tell me that what I wanted to do "could not" be done because his silly $5000 tool couldn't model it. Proving him wrong simply increased his conviction that what I was doing was immoral and perverse. Which, come to think of it, it probably was. Hee hee.

Gordon McMillan, 8 Jun 1998

The majority of programmers aren't really looking for flexibility. Most languages that enjoy huge success seem to do so not because they're flexible, but because they do one particular thing extremely well. Like Fortran for fast number-crunching in its day, or Perl for regexps, or C++ for compatibility with C, or C for ... well, C's the exception that proves the rule.

Tim Peters, 11 Jun 1998

It has also been referred to as the "Don Beaudry hack," but that's a misnomer. There's nothing hackish about it -- in fact, it is rather elegant and deep, even though there's something dark to it.

Guido van Rossum, Metaclass Programming in Python 1.5

Just point your web browser at http://www.python.org/search/ and look for "program", "doesn't", "work", or "my". Whenever you find someone else whose program didn't work, don't do what they did. Repeat as needed.

Tim Peters, on python-help, 16 Jun 1998

Now some people see unchecked raw power and flee from perceived danger, while others rush toward perceived opportunity. That's up to them. But I think it's enormously clarifying in either case to see just how raw this particular gimmick can get.

Tim Peters, 16 Jun 1998

Every language has its partisans, usually among folks deeply immersed in their particular theology, triumphant in having divined the inner meaning of some esoteric operations, like a medieval Jesuit hot on the trail of the final ontological proof, whose conciseness in solving a single problem makes them almost swoon with ecstacy at the expected savings of many keystrokes, as if those very keystrokes represented a lot of heavy lifting and hauling on their part.

Jesuits weren't medieval, the order having been founded in 1540, but it's still a good quotation.

John Holmgren, 18 Jun 1998

> In general, the situation sucks.

mind-if-i-use-that-as-my-epitaph<wink>?-ly y'rs - tim

Timothy J. Grant and Tim Peters, 22 Jun 1998

> Just for the record, on AIX, the following C program:

Oh no you don't! I followed AIX threads for the first year it came out, but eventually decided there was no future in investing time in baffling discussions that usually ended with "oh, never mind -- turns out it's a bug" <0.9 wink>.

Vladimir Marangozov and Tim Peters, 23 Jun 1998

Python - why settle for snake oil when you can have the whole snake?

Mark Jackson, 26 Jun 1998

The problem I have with "SETL sets" in Python is the same I have with every other language's "killer core" in Python: SETL is much more than just "a set type", Eiffel is much more than just fancy pre- and post- conditions, Perl's approach to regexps is much more than just its isolated regexp syntax, Scheme is much more than just first-class functions & lexical closures, and so on. Good languages aren't random collections of interchangeable features: they have a philosophy and internal coherence that's never profitably confused with their surface features.

Tim Peters, 10 Jul 1998

"Since I'm so close to the pickle module, I just look at the pickles directly, as I'm pretty good at reading pickles."

"As you all can imagine, this trick goes over really well at parties."

Jim Fulton and Paul Everitt on the Bobo list, 17 Jul 1998

My theory is that the churning of old threads and reminiscences (Continuations, Icon influences, old-T-shirts, the pre news-group mailing list archive, whitespace, closures, .... ) has brought some old messages to the surface, via some mechanism similar to the way plankton and other nutrients are cycled in the ocean.

Steven D. Majewski, 23 Jul 1998

In general, Our Guido flees from schemes that merely change which foot gets blown off <0.45 caliber wink>. Schemes that remove the firing pin entirely have a much better, um, shot <wink>.

Tim Peters, 25 Jul 1998

I don't know what "invert the control structure" means -- but if it's anything like turning a hamster inside-out, I would expect it to be messy <wink>.

Tim Peters, 25 Jul 1998

This makes it possible to pass complex object hierarchies to a C coder who thinks computer science has made no worthwhile advancements since the invention of the pointer.

Gordon McMillan, 30 Jul 1998

The nice thing about list comprehensions is that their most useful forms could be implemented directly as light sugar for ordinary Python loops, leaving lambdas out of it entirely. You end up with a subtly different beast, but so far it appears to be a beast that's compatible with cuddly pythons.

Tim Peters, 6 Aug 1998

I wonder what Guido thinks he might do in Python2 (assuming, of course, that he doesn't hire a bus to run over him before then <wink>).

Tim Peters, 26 Aug 1998

After writing CGI scripts the traditional way for a few years, it is taking awhile to reshape my thinking. No sledgehammer to the head yet, but lots of small sculpting hammers...

John Eikenberry on the Bobo list, 27 Aug 1998

I believe sometimes numbers creep into my programs as strings, so '4'/2 needs to also be 2. Other languages do this. Since this is due in part to user input, I guess 'four'/2, 'quattro/2', 'iv/2' etc. need to be 2 as well; don't know any other language that does so, but Python could take the lead here in software reliability. Any white space should be ignored, including between my ears. I don't have time to write any useful software, so I've decided to devote myself to proposing various changes to the Python interpreter.

Donn Cave uses sarcasm with devastating effect, 28 Aug 1998

then-again-if-history-were-important-god-wouldn't-have-hid- it-in-the- past-ly y'rs

Tim Peters, 28 Aug 1998

> >( float ( / 1 3 ))
> 0.33333333333333331
Now that one is impressive: it's the best possible 17-digit decimal representation of the best possible 53-bit fp binary representation of 1/3, and 17 is the minimum number of decimal digits you need in general so that a 53-bit binary fp value can be exactly reconstructed by a best-possible atof.

Tim Peters, 2 Sep 1998

This is not a technical issue so much as a human issue; we are limited and so is our time. (Is this a bug or a feature of time? Careful; trick question!)

Fred Drake on the Documentation SIG, 9 Sep 1998

There are also some surprises [in the late Miocene Australia] some small mammals totally unknown and not obviously related to any known marsupial (appropriately awarded names such as Thingodonta and Weirdodonta) and a giant python immortalized as Montypythonoides.

The Book of Life, found by Aaron Watters

Can the denizens of this group enlighten me about what the advantages of Python are, versus Perl ?

"python" is more likely to pass unharmed through your spelling checker than "perl".

An unknown poster and Fredrik Lundh, 11 Sep 1998

I have to say that the Dragon book is good when you consider the alternatives, but compared with the Platonic ideal it leaves much to be desired. In particular the algorithm descriptions are described at such a low level it's difficult to understand how they work -- and at a higher conceptual level involving graph theoretical transforms of automata (which I got thanks to Jean Gallier by word of mouth and effort of chalk) is nearly invisible for the trees.

Aaron Watters, 17 Sep 1998

... and at a higher conceptual level involving graph theoretical transforms of automata (which I got thanks to Jean Gallier by word of mouth and effort of chalk) ...

Aaron Watters, 17 Sep 1998

Every clarity vanished? :-)

Christian Tismer after answering a poster's question, 17 Sep 1998

Take the "public" modifier off Joseph's interface, or leave it there but nest the interface inside class "closure", or even move the interface to its own printer.java file, and it compiles and runs without incident. Most of the big boys I hang with aren't paralyzed by self-explanatory compiler msgs <wink>.

not-to-mention-the-girls-ly y'rs

Tim Peters, 24 Sep 1998

<shakes head ruefully> You kids today, with your piercings and your big pants and your purple-and-green hair and your X-Files and your Paula Cole and your espresso coffee and your Seattle grunge rock and your virtual machines and your acid-washed jeans and your Ernest Hemingway and your object-oriented languages and your fax machines and your hula hoops and your zoot suits and your strange slang phrases like "That's so bogus" or "What a shocking bad hat" and those atonal composers like Arnold Schoenberg and Milton Babbit that you kids seem to like these days and your cubist painters and your Ally McBeal and that guy in Titanic and your TCP/IP protocol and your heads filled with all that Cartesian dualism these days and ... well, I just don't get you kids. <shakes head ruefully again>

A.M. Kuchling, 1 Oct 1998

E.g., at the REBOL prompt I typed

     send tim@email.msn.com "Did this work?"
and in response it dialed my modem, connected to my ISP, and then REBOL crashed after provoking an invalid page fault in kernel32.dll. Then my connection broke, and the modem dialed and connected again. Then it just sat there until it timed out.

now-that's-user-friendly<wink>-ly y'rs

Tim Peters, 24 Sep 1998

I've reinvented the idea of variables and types as in a programming language, something I do on every project.

Greg Ward, September 1998

"The event/tree dualism reminds me why I always wanted to be able to do pattern matching on trees."

"'Honey, what is this guy doing up there?' 'Oh, I suppose it's Christian, trying to match some patterns.' "

Christian Tismer and Dirk Heise, 12 Oct 1998

Perl is worse than Python because people wanted it worse.

In a post to the perl-users mailing list (archived version at http://faqchest.dynhost.com/prgm/perlu-l/perl-98/perl-9810/perl- 981002/perl98101602_19460.html)

Larry Wall, 14 Oct 1998

"What's the opinion of the (wink) Python luminaries?"

"The last time I saw a position paper from them, they came out strongly against the suggestion that old people be put on ice floes and left to drift out to sea to die.

they-never-like-any-of-my-ideas-ly y'rs"

Stuart Hungerford and Tim Peters, 14 Oct 1998

Rather than borrowing from our beauty-impaired ugly sibling, why not look at Java, the beautiful, conceited sister? We could have something more like JavaDoc.

Paul Prescod, 18 Oct 1998

It won't work. This is far too concrete a problem to interest Tim. I see 3 possible approaches:

1) Claim that Python can't do a <some random combination of 'L', 'R', 'A'> grammar. This will yield an irate response from Aaron which will draw Tim into it and you'll get a solution in 3 months after lots of entertaining posts.

2) Turn it into an optimization problem and get a solution from Marc- Andre using mxTextTools next week.

3) Turn it into an obfuscation problem and get competing solutions from Greg Stein and Fredrik tomorrow morning.

if-anybody's-found-don-beaudry's-sucker-button-let-me-know ly 'yrs

Gordon McMillan, 16 Oct 1998

To my battle-scarred mind, documentation is never more than a hint. Read it once with disbelief suspended, and then again with full throttle skepticism.

Gordon McMillan, 19 Oct 1998

Then let the record show that I hereby formally lobby for such an optimization! I'd lay out some arguments, except that it's already implemented <wink>.

well-that-one-went-easy-ly y'rs - tim

Tim Peters, 20 Oct 1998

We did requirements and task analysis, iterative design, and user testing. You'd almost think programming languages were an interface between people and computers.

Steven Pemberton, one of the designers of Python's direct ancestor ABC

Not at all, although I agree here too <wink>. It's like saying a fork is broken just because it's not that handy for jacking up a car. That is, Guido implemented the syntax to support default arguments, and it works great for that purpose! Using it to fake closures is a hack, and the "hey, this is cool!" / "hey, this really sucks!" mixed reaction thus follows, much as pain follows a car falling on your skull. Stick to stabbing peas, or even teensy pea-sized closures, and a fork serves very well.

Tim Peters, 31 Oct 1998

My customers consider it a marketable skill that I a) think for myself b) share my thoughts with them.

Paul Prescod, 2 Nov 1998

Anyone else know what a Stanley #45 plane is? ... it's not what you use if you aren't looking to produce intricate moldings. If you want to make a tabletop flat, and bring out the natural beauty of the wood, you use a big, long and flat bench plane. The beauty is in the wood, not the tool, the tool is just the right one to let you see that and to let others see it too.

And that's a very impressive kind of beauty in itself, isn't it? The kind of beauty some say is homely--an uninteresting face, boring angles, few if any parts, no curly flowers. It's just a tool, and not beautiful at all. But look, that tool makes beauty. It makes it *easy* to make beautiful things, to see deep into the the grain of whatever material you're working.

Maybe it gets us a little closer to art.

Ivan Van Laningham, 3 Nov 1998

You might think "That's illegal." That's not illegal; that's cool.

Paul Dubois at IPC7, on recursive template definitions in C++

This supports reflection, which is the 90s way of writing self- modifying code.

John Aycock at IPC7, during his parsing talk

It turns out that docstrings are the only way to associate information with functions, which is what led you to abuse them in such a fascinating and stomach-churning way.

Jim Hugunin at IPC7, on embedding BNF parsing rules in docstrings

"The Mayans looked on the integers as gods."

"What did the Mayans think of integer division?"

Ivan Van Laningham and an unknown audience member at IPC7

Y2K problem? The Mayans didn't have a millennium-2K problem!

Eric S. Raymond at IPC7, on learning that the Mayan calendar takes 28 octillion years to wrap around

"Generic identifier" -- think about it too much and your head explodes.

Sean McGrath at IPC7, discussing SGML terminology

Nothing I've ever written has reached 1.0.

Greg Ward at IPC7, on using small version numbers

Well, that's a little thing -- the specification.

Guido van Rossum at IPC7

"We've got a name (Module Distribution Utilities) that gives us a good 3-letter acronym to group things under: MDU."

"<thpftbt>"

Greg Ward and Jeremy Hylton at IPC7

Mailman is designed to be extensible and comprehensible. Without comprehensibility, enhancement is self-limiting -- functionality may be improved, but further enhancement gets increasingly difficult.

Ken Manheimer at IPC7

"Generating Usable Installations" -- OK, you've got the GUI SIG.

Barry Warsaw at IPC7, on the choice of name for a SIG to discuss extension building

Performance is a lot like drugs -- it doesn't do much for you, but it occupies a lot of your time.

Jeremy Hylton at IPC7, on the need for a Performance SIG

I made some slides, but they suck, so I won't bother with them.

Andrew Kuchling at IPC7

"What's Python?"

"It's a computer programming language."

"You mean, like DOS?"

Some guy in a bar and Eric S. Raymond (who was wearing a conference T-shirt) at IPC7

Excellent plan! Devious minds are attracted to Python, like mimes to unappreciative crowds.

Tim Peters, 13 Nov 1998

Ha! If we had only started numbering dimensions with one, we'd already be living in a 4-D world, and Mental Organons would be *all over the place*!

Tim Peters, 13 Nov 1998

Well, during those periods when I was me, there was most assuredly only one of me. But during some of the more intense discussions, I was not me, and while all the rest of the attendees were also not me, it is difficult to say whether they were the same not me that I was or wasn't at the time.

Gordon McMillan, 18 Nov 1998

If Python strays into trying to be something completely new it will fail, like Scheme, K and Smalltalk. There are both technical and sociological reasons for this. If you stray too far technically, you make mistakes: either you make modelling mistakes because you don't have an underlying logical model (i.e. C++ inheritance) or you make interface mistakes because you don't understand how your new paradigm will be used by real programmers.

Let research languages innovate. Python integrates.

Paul Prescod, 21 Nov 1998

"I got a little mad at the way python polynomials were written -- the code looked like its author knew neither polynomials nor Python."

"That would be me :-)."

Moshe Zadka and Guido van Rossum, 22 Nov 1998

I would recommend not wasting any more time on the naming issue. (This is a recurring theme in my posts -- remember, I spent about 0.3 microseconds thinking about whether "Python" would be a good name for a programming language, and I've never regretted it.)

Guido van Rossum, 25 Nov 1998

"My course members are almost all coming from Math, and the first question was 'why isn't it complete?' Just a matter of elegance."

"Oh, don't worry. My background is math. This is actually good for them -- like discovering that Santa Claus doesn't really exist."

Christian Tismer and Guido van Rossum, 2 Dec 1998

One of my cheap entertainments is axiomatizing characterizations of [Tim Peters]. I think I've come up with a minimal one: the only c.l.p poster more concerned with working non-legal code than non-working legal code.

Cameron Laird, 2 Dec 1998

PYTHON = (P)rogrammers (Y)earning (T)o (H)omestead (O)ur (N)oosphere.

Seen in Sean McGrath's .sig, 3 Dec 1998

I never realized it before, but having looked that over I'm certain I'd rather have my eyes burned out by zombies with flaming dung sticks than work on a conscientious Unicode regex engine.

Tim Peters, 3 Dec 1998

"Python? Oh, I've heard of that. I have a friend at the NSA who uses it."

Overhead at a meeting, quoted in c.l.p on 3 Dec 1998

I think Gordon has priority on this one, since it's clearly a consequence of his observation that tim_one despises and deplores anything useful. Which has greater explanatory power, since I've often noted that tim_one complains about legal working code too! Anything that works may be useful, right? Brrrrr. Must destroy.

Tim Peters in the third person, 3 Dec 1998

"Eric has a way of explaining what we're doing and why we're doing it," says Guido van Rossum, the inventor of a programming language called Python and a prominent figure among open-source proponents. Van Rossum, a gawky Dutchman who now lives in Reston, invited Raymond to address a group of Python software developers in Houston...

From the Washington Post, 3 Dec 1998

Subclassing with a mixin doesn't let you, for example, interfere with how an existing attribute is accessed. The general idea here is to kidnap the object, skin it, then waltz around in public impersonating it. All without letting the programmer / user know he's been bamboozled.

Gordon McMillan, 3 Dec 1998

Hey, while they're all eating dinner, let's sneak in a keyword!

emancipate variable: declare absolute freedom for one variable. It can be whatever it wants whenever it wants in whatever form it wants in whatever language it wants on whatever computer it wants. In the ensuing chaos it will get nothing done, but it will give programmers stories to tell for years to come...

Mike Fletcher, 25 Dec 1998

"Can we kill this thread? The only thing it does as far as I'm concerned is increase the posting statistics. :-)"

"don't-open-cans-of-worms-unless-you're-looking-for-a-new-diet-ly y'rs"

Guido van Rossum and Tim Peters, 6 Jan 1999

Hey, that was the first truly portable laptop! Of course I'm nostalgic. Came with a mighty 24Kb RAM standard, & I popped the extra $80 to max it out at 32Kb. Much of Cray's register assigner was developed on that beast: unlike the prototype Crays of the time, the M100 was always available and never crashed. Even better, I could interrupt it any time, poke around, and resume right where it left off <wink>.

m100-basic-reminded-me-a-lot-of-python-except-that-it-sucked-ly y'rs

Tim Peters remembering the Model 100, 10 Jan 1999

"Heh -- all it really broke so far was my resistance to installing Tk. I suppose wizardry is inevitable after one installs something, though <wink>."

"Spoken like a truly obsessive-compulsive wizard! It-takes-one-to-know -one..."

Tim Peters and Guido van Rossum, 6 Jan 1999

Note, however, that architectural forms are completely declarative and can be implemented in a highly optimized fashion. The sorts of extensions that Microsoft has proposed for XSL (<xsl:eval>...</>) would completely destroy those features. Architectural mapping would, in general, be as reliable and high performance as ordinary software -- (not at all).

Paul Prescod, 6 Jan 1999

Darned confusing, unless you have that magic ingredient coffee, of which I can pay you Tuesday for a couple pounds of extra-special grind today.

John Mitchell, 11 Jan 1999

That's so obvious that someone has already got a patent on it.

Guido van Rossum, 12 Jan 1999

I have to stop now. I've already told you more than I know.

Wolf Logan, 14 Jan 1999

I really don't have any incisive insights about the economic mechanisms or viability of free software and open source, but I do have a strong, clear sense that such things make it possible for me to do my job, as a programmer and a facilitator of/participant in online communities, better and more easily than I otherwise could do.

Ken Manheimer, 24 Jan 1999

Every standard applies to a certain problem domain and a certain level. A standard can work perfectly and save the world economy billions of dollars and there will still be software and hardware compatibility problems. In fact, solving one level of compatibility just gives rise to the next level of incompatibility. For example, connecting computers together through standard protocols gives rise to the problem of byte endianness issues. Solving byte endianness gives rise to the problem of character sets. Solving character sets gives rise to the problem of end-of-line and end-of-file conventions. Solving that gets us to the problem of interpreting the low-level syntax (thus XML). Then we need to interpet that syntax in terms of objects and properties (thus RDF, WDDX, etc.). And so forth.

We could judge a standard's success by its ability to reveal another level of standardization that is necessary.

Paul Prescod, 24 Jan 1999

I just want to go on the record as being completely opposed to computer languages. Let them have their own language and soon they'll be off in the corner plotting with each other!

Steven D. Majewski, 25 Jan 1999

Constraints often boost creativity.

Jim Hugunin, 11 Feb 1999

Programming is no different - it's only by going outside what you know, and looking from another direction (working, if you like, your brain, so that it can be more powerful :-) that you can improve further.

Andrew Cooke, 12 Feb 1999

any-technology-indistinguishable-from-magic-is-too-mysterious- to- trust-ly y'rs

Tim Peters, 16 Feb 1999

"I don't think we've thought of this, and it's actually a good idea."

"I'd better go patent it!"

Uche Ogbuji and Paul Prescod, 16 Feb 1999

Contrary to advertising, no parsing system is "easy to learn", in or out of the Python world -- parsing is a hard problem. Most are easy enough to use after practice, though. Ironically, the trickiest system of all to master (regexps) is also the feeblest and the most widely used.

Tim Peters, 17 Feb 1999

So Python's only cross-platform choices were to mimic the C/POSIX API or invent its own new x-platform API; only one of those is realistic (as Java proves every day <wink>).

Tim Peters, 21 Feb 1999

Yes: the code in ntpath.split is too clever to have any hope of working correctly <wink>.

Tim Peters, 19 Mar 1999

Thanks. The sooner I get discouraged and quit, the more time I'll save overall.

Frank Sergeant, 28 Mar 1999

But it's a general way to debug: tell someone what right things your program is doing. Chances are that you will see the wrong thing(s) before the other person has said anything... I just stick a picture of a face on my monitor and talk to it to find bugs.

Richard van de Stadt, 9 Apr 1999

Might just be nostalgia, but I think I would give an arm or two to get that (not necessarily my own, though).

Fredrik Lundh, 13 May 1999

1. Beautiful is better than ugly.

2. Explicit is better than implicit.

3. Simple is better than complex.

4. Complex is better than complicated.

5. Flat is better than nested.

6. Sparse is better than dense.

7. Readability counts.

8. Special cases aren't special enough to break the rules.

9. Although practicality beats purity.

10. Errors should never pass silently.

11. Unless explicitly silenced.

12. In the face of ambiguity, refuse the temptation to guess.

13. There should be one -- and preferably only one -- obvious way to do it.

14. Although that way may not be obvious at first unless you're Dutch.

15. Now is better than never.

16. Although never is often better than right now.

17. If the implementation is hard to explain, it's a bad idea.

18. If the implementation is easy to explain, it may be a good idea.

19. Namespaces are one honking great idea -- let's do more of those!

Tim Peters' 19 Pythonic Theses, 4 Jun 1999

"However, I've heard that after about 10K items in a dict, it starts having problems."

"11,523 to be exact. After that, dicts drink to excess and show up for work late the morning after. We don't like to talk about it, though."

Aahz Maruch and Tim Peters, 8 Jun 1999

Stackless Python 0.2, a plug-in replacement for the Python core that does not use the C stack, has been announced by Christian Tismer as the best way to prove that it was possible without a major rewrite to the core. Neel Krishnaswami commented to Christian, "This is very neat, and you are completely deranged".

From Linux Weekly News, 17 Jul 1999

... we need more people like him, who are willing to explore without being driven to argue with people about it.

William Tanksley on Chuck Moore, inventor of Forth, 2 Jul 1999

Sorry for the term, I picked it up from Jim Fulton back when it was an about-to-be-added feature for Principia/Aqueduct. As with so many Fultonisms, it's vivid and tends to stick in one's (non-pluggable) brain.

Paul Everitt on the term "pluggable brains", 5 Jul 1999

I picture a lump of inanimate flesh (a result from a relational database query) being infused with the spark of life (object behavior, aka class).

Jim Fulton on the term "pluggable brains", 5 Jul 1999

This is good. It means that while Ionesco is dead, his spirit lives on.

Gordon McMillan on how Windows attaches meaning to 3-character file extensions, 30 Jul 1999

(On the statement print "42 monkeys"+"1 snake") BTW, both Perl and Python get this wrong. Perl gives 43 and Python gives "42 monkeys1 snake", when the answer is clearly "41 monkeys and 1 fat snake".

Jim Fulton, 10 Aug 1999

I expect that what you really object to is the absence of control structures other than goto, and the LT/GE/etc spelling of comparison operators. That was common enough in its day, and even by the time Pascal came around the keypunch I used still didn't have a semicolon key. It looks ugly in retrospect only because it is <wink>.

Tim Peters on SNOBOL4, 17 Aug 1999

Theory and reality rarely are kissing cousins.

Christopher Petrilli, 1 Sep 1999

Features generally don't exist in isolation, and you have to look at all the consequences, not just the one that attracts you at first sight.

Tim Peters, 3 Sep 1999

The danger in this line of thinking is not realizing that the computational effort involved in big NP complete problems is *so* huge that even in optimized micro-code, the algorithm might take a million years to run. Tweezers or shovel -- it makes little difference when you are trying to move a universe...

Sean McGrath, 4 Sep 1999

On a scale of one to ten I'd give it a tim.

William Tanksley, 13 Sep 1999

Statistical analysis shows that the junk looks like human text, which clearly shows that it is actually used in some yet unknown way. (docstrings?)

Fredrik Lundh, writing about junk DNA, 5 Oct 1999

If I engineer code that I expect to be in use for N years, I make damn sure that every internal limit is at least 10x larger than the largest I can conceive of a user making reasonable use of at the end of those N years. The invariable result is that the N years pass, and fewer than half of the users have bumped into the limit <0.5 wink>.

Tim Peters, 11 Nov 1999

I don't think the bytecodehacks, while sufficiently dark and useless to be a tim-ism, qualify me in any way for a Pythonic Wizard Hat...

Michael Hudson, 16 Nov 1999

The bottom tier is what a certain class of wanker would call "business objects"...

Greg Ward, 9 Dec 1999

Since I've done fewer than my normal quota of futile things this week, I thought I'd post to remind people that ...

Phil Austin, 9 Dec 1999

There are useful diagrams in UML, (eg, the state and transition diagrams). Unfortunately, the one most tools use to generate code (and draw from reverse engineering) has everything to do with language structure, and nothing to do with what actually happens at runtime. To put it bluntly: people spend most of their time designing the wrong thing. Worse, they get it wrong, but it's carved in stone now; so the final system is either needlessly complex and marginally functional, or bears no resemblance to the "design".

Gordon McMillan, 15 Dec 1999

The secret to good performance is to prototype and prototype, then code the bottlenecks in a faster language. The secret to large systems is to prototype and prototype, until you've got clean separation of the system into managable pieces, then code in whatever language most suits the need of each piece.

Gordon McMillan, 15 Dec 1999

When Jim [Fulton] says "tricky" it means your brain could explode.

Michel Pelletier, 15 Dec 1999

You have start-tags, attributes, end-tags and character data. We have all seen "XML applications" and "XML parsers" which handle this gang- of-four concepts. ... Now we can peer over the parapet and shout "your parser smells of elderberries" or "I wave my mixed content at your ankles", as long as we like but the simple gang-of-four base apps will not go away.

Sean McGrath, 19 Dec 1999

Abstraction is one of those notions that Python tosses out the window, yet expresses very well.

Gordon McMillan, 6 Jan 2000

The set of naming conventions has a cardinality equal to the number of Python users.

Gordon McMillan, 6 Jan 2000

The way to build large Python applications is to componentize and loosely-couple the hell out of everything.

Aahz Maruch, 6 Jan 2000

It's not the mail volume that bothers me -- I can ignore 100s of messages a day very quickly. It's the time it takes to respond to all of them.

Guido van Rossum, 20 Jan 2000

This is the way of Haskell or Design by Contract of Eiffel. This one is like wearing a XV century armor, you walk very safely but in a very tiring way.

Manuel Gutierrez Algaba, 26 Jan 2000

Life's better without braces.

Unofficial motto of IPC8, coined by Bruce Eckel

"Aggressive" means "sometimes wrong".

John Aycock at IPC8, during his "Agressive Type Inferencing" talk

Do I do everything in C++ and teach a course in advanced swearing?

David Beazley at IPC8, on choosing a language for teaching

Alice is 3D Logo on steroids.

Randy Pausch at IPC8

I was willing to grant this one at once, but, now that I look back at it all -- the loyalty oaths, the relentless self-criticism sessions, the midnight visits from the Ministry of Love -- I'm afraid what we really have here is unspeakably more sinister.

Tim Peters after a reference to "Python's cult-like following", 2 Feb 2000

Guido (like us!) is a bit schizophrenic here: he wants to be a benevolent dictator, but also wants to treat people like grownups. This probably worked better before Python got a large American audience <0.9 wink>.

Tim Peters, 10 Feb 2000

I have formal proofs that any change of the indentation rules results in 35% increase of the page faults for only 63.7% of the cache misses. The net effect is an overall slowdown of 10%.

Vladimir Marangozov after Yet Another indentation flamewar, 16 Feb 2000

... let me just say that my least-favourite Python error message is "SyntaxError: invalid syntax", which somehow manages to be both overly terse and redundant at the same time.

Greg Ward, 15 Feb 2000

See, functional programmers are an insular lot. You rarely see them in public, except at parades when they all have antler- hats and silly shoes on. So they completely missed the infamous "goto considered harmful" thread and didn't even realize they were doing anything wrong.

Now, let's pretend you're writing a 'bot that can pass as a functional programmer. There's a complex protocol here. When two functional programmers see each other on the street, they recognize each other by the antler hats. But in certain parts of the Midwest, regular people wear antler hats, too. So there's a protocol. First a <wink wink>. Then the secret handshake. Then you sniff each other's armpits and stamp your foot 3 times.

OK, so you've written a bot, and it works fine on the street. Now you send it to a cocktail party. It sees a potential functional programmer and gives the <wink wink>. Now it tries to move into position to do the secret handshake, but discovers that it's antler-hat is entangled with someone else's. Oops. <wink wink> at the new guy. Handshake. But before it can sniff, the first one has moved up for his handshake. Ay yi yi. Your bot crashes and is exposed.

So now you rewrite your bot to use a finite state machine so it can handle multiple sessions. That means throwing out all the code that worked on the street. But if you'd used continuations, it would be a relatively minor adjustment of that code. 'Course you wouldn't have had to write the bot to begin with.

Gordon McMillan, 18 Feb 2000

IIRC, Guido went to CNRI to work on bots and agents or something similar. Could the timbot and the effbot be an offshoot of that? Next, he's going to start a company with timbot and effbot as the main products. Van Rossum's Universal Robots?

Bernhard Herzog, 21 Feb 2000

So those are the extremes: Boehm-Demers-Weiser avoids blame by refusing to do anything. Java avoids blame by exposing an impossibly baroque implementation-driven finalization model. Scheme avoids blame by refusing to do anything "by magic", but helps you to shoot yourself with the weapon of your choice. The bad news is that I don't know of a scheme not at an extreme!

Tim Peters on the knotty problem of finalizers and cycles, 3 Mar 2000

It's extremely un-Pythonic to let things leak (despite that it has let things leak for a decade <wink>), but also extremely un-Pythonic to make some wild-ass guess.

Tim Peters on garbage collection, 3 Mar 2000

IOW, the only people who lose under this scheme are the ones begging to lose, and their "loss" consists of taking responsibility.

Tim Peters, 3 Mar 2000

An axiom is accepted without proof: we have plenty of proof that there's no thoroughly good answer (i.e., every language that has ever addressed this issue -- along with every language that ever will <wink>).

Tim Peters on garbage collection, 3 Mar 2000

I can see the FAQ now...

Q1.1.2.3: Why can't I divide integers?

A: You drooling moron! You need a 10-page owners manual and instructional video to handle the notational complexity of Tic-Tacs, don't you? As every schoolboy knows, the integers are a ring, not a field, you simpering simpleton. Oh wait! Let me guess! I have to spell it out for you, you festering wombat boil. You can't divide integers by integers and get integers. Understand now? Now go out there and don't do it. And read Herstein, while you're at it.

Johann Hibschman, 4 Mar 2000

Actually, I believe you understand me fine, you'd just rather not believe it: floating point sucks, rationals suck, refusing to allow int division sucks, the constructive reals suck, symbolic manipulation sucks, ..., but all in different ways for different reasons. Every one bristles with its own brands of both shallow and deep "surprises". So it goes -- seeking to represent the infinite by the finite is an inherently unreachable goal. This is also why people die <wink>.

Tim Peters, 4 Mar 2000

The reason I'm right is that I said there won't be any single "survivor" of the evolutionary struggle, and that the efforts to crown one's favorite as such are just so much noise. The software ecosystem of the foreseeable future will always have its own form of "diversity": there will be lions and elephants and fish and seals and birds, because there will be many diverse "habitats" where the particular adaptations of each will be needed/advantageous.

The reasoned debates (as opposed to religious wars) may lead to lions with opposable thumbs, or elephants that can see in the infrared, but there will never be a 2000-pound fish with a mane and wings. Well, not outside the lab, anyway.

Ran, 5 Mar 2000

"Complexity" seems to be a lot like "energy": you can transfer it from the end user to one/some of the other players, but the total amount seems to remain pretty much constant for a given task.

Ran, 5 Mar 2000

LaTeX2HTML is pain.

Fred Drake in a documentation checkin message, 14 Mar 2000

Here, have some cycles of reversed kielbasa. And ten (10 (0xa (101010b))) Usenet Points, redeemable in comp.lang.python for increased local prestige. Some prestige may depend upon your own actions. Local Prestige may or may not have any effect on your actual life (or lack thereof).

William Tanksley, 21 Mar 2000

Mucking with builtins is fun the way huffing dry erase markers is fun. Things are very pretty at first, but eventually the brain cell lossage will more than outweigh that cheap thrill.

Barry Warsaw, 23 Mar 2000

>Have you ever looked at the output of a bib | tbl | eqn pipeline?

Are you kids still using that as a pick-up line?

Roy Smith and Cameron Laird, 4 Apr 2000

This is like getting lost in a dictionary. What does quincuncial mean anyhow?

Dennis Hamilton, 4 Apr 2000

UTF-8 has a certain purity in that it equally annoys every nation, and is nobody's default encoding.

Andy Robinson, 10 Apr 2000

"Now if we could figure out where python programmers are from, someone could write a book and get rich."

"Yorkshire."

Quinn Dunkan and Warren Postma, 11 Apr 2000

If I didn't have my part-time performance art income to help pay the bills, I could never afford to support my programming lifestyle.

Jeff Bauer, 21 Apr 2000

Of course, this brought me face to face once again with Python's pons asinorum, the significance of whitespace.

Eric S. Raymond, in the Linux Journal's Python supplement

Surprisingly enough, Python has taught me more about Lisp than Lisp ever did ;-).

Glyph Lefkowitz, 3 May 2000

How about we notate the hungarian notation with the type of hungarian notation, you know, hungarian meta notation: HWND aWin32ApiHandleDefinedInWindowsDotH_hwndWindowHandle;

Warren Postma, 4 May 2000

Note that Python's licence is in fact the MIT X11 licence, with MIT filed off and CNRI written in its place in crayon.

A.M. Kuchling, 5 May 2000

Once you've read and understood The Art of the Metaobject Protocol you are one quarter of the way to provisional wizard status. (The other three-fourths are b) understanding Haskell's monads, c) grokking Prolog, and d) becoming handy with a combinator- based language by implementing a Forth.)

Neel Krishnaswami, 9 May 2000

"The future" has arrived but they forgot to update the docs.

R. David Murray, 9 May 2000

/* This algorithm is from a book written before the invention of structured programming... */

Comment in parser/pgen.c, noted by Michael Hudson

For more information please see my unpublished manuscript on steam driven turing machines. [2000pp in crayon donated to the harvard library -- they never told me whether they filed it under mathematics, philosophy, logic, mechanical engineering, or computational science]

Aaron Watters, 12 May 2000

Me? I hate the whole lambda calculus, not because of what it is, but because of what many people think it is. They think that it's the whole of computer science, the ultimate way to express and reason about programs, when in reality it's merely a shabby and incomplete model of how Fortran fails to work. The first thing SICP has to do is teach everyone how bad the lambda calculus model is -- as part of teaching them about a language allegedly based on lambda calculus.

I'm sorry, was my bias showing again? :-)

William Tanksley, 13 May 2000

I never got beyond starting the data-structures in C++, I never got beyond seeing how it would work in Scheme. I finished it in one Python -filled afternoon, and discovered the idea sucked big time. I was glad I did it in Python, because it only cost me one afternoon to discover the idea sucks.

Moshe Zadka, 13 May 2000

In truth, we use 'j' to represent sqrt(-1) for exactly the same reason we use a convention for the direction of current which is exactly the opposite of the direction the electrons actually travel: because it drives physicists crazy. (And if we pick up a few mathematicians or whatever along the way, well, that's just gravy. ;-)

Grant R. Griffin, 14 May 2000

Unicode: everyone wants it, until they get it.

Barry Warsaw, 16 May 2000

I saw a hack you sent me a few months ago and approved of its intent and was saddened by its necessity.

Jim Fulton, 16 May 2000

Suspicions are most easily dispelled/confirmed via evidence, and taking the trouble to do this has the pleasant side-effect that you can either cease expending effort worrying, or move directly to taking positive action to correct the problem.

Neel Krishnaswami, 21 May 2000

Thanks to the overnight turnaround and the early interpreter's habit of returning nothing at all useful if faced with a shortage of )s, one could easily detect the LISP users: they tended to walk around with cards full of )))))))... in their shirt pockets, to be slapped onto the end of submitted card decks: one at least got something back if there were too many )s.

John W. Baxter, 21 May 2000

Python: embodies a harmony of chocolate kisses with hints of jasmine and rose. Trussardi's wild new fragrance.

From Marie Claire, Australian edition, May 2000; noted by Fiona Czuczman

In arts, compromises yield mediocre results. The personality and vision of the artist has to go through. I like to see Python as a piece of art. I just hope the artist will not get too tainted by usability studies.

François Pinard, 22 May 2000

In fact, I've never seen an argument about which I cared less. I'm completely case insensitivity insensitive.

William Tanksley, 23 May 2000

They boo-ed when Dylan went electric. But for me its about the instincts of a designer, and the faith of a fan. Not science. So much the better.

Arthur Siegel, 23 May 2000

Burroughs did something very odd with COBOL at one point (and no, it wasn't The Naked Lunch).

Will Rose, 27 May 2000

Code generators are hacks. Sometimes necessary hacks, but hacks nevertheless.

Paul Prescod, 7 Jun 2000

Very rough; like estimating the productivity of a welder by the amount of acetylene used.

Paul Svensson, on measuring programmer productivity by lines of code, 19 Jun 2000

I vote for backward compatibility for now, and not only because that will irritate /F the most.

Tim Peters, 30 Jun 2000

A comment is in order then. If the code is smarter than it looks, most people aren't going to think it looks very smart.

Jeremy Hylton, 6 Jul 2000

You and I think too much alike ?!ng. And if that doesn't scare you now, you should have a talk with Gordon.

Barry Warsaw, 12 Jul 2000

Isn't it somewhat of a political statement to allow marriages of three or more items? I always presumed that this function was n-ary, like map().

Paul Prescod, on the proposed name marry() for a function to combine sequences, 12 Jul 2000

Since my finger was slowest reaching my nose, I got elected Editor. On the positive side of that, I get to make the early decisions that will be cursed for generations of Python hackers to come.

Barry Warsaw, 12 Jul 2000

Hey, you know, we can work this in. Sailor Moon + Giant Robots + Tentacle Demons + Python Conference == Bizarre hilarity ensues!

Alexander Williams, 4 Aug 2000

The rapid establishment of social ties, even of a fleeting nature, advance not only that goal but its standing in the uberconscious mesh of communal psychic, subjective, and algorithmic interbeing. But I fear I'm restating the obvious.

Will Ware, 28 Aug 2000

The comp.lang.python newsgroup erupted last week with a flurry of posts that accused the Python development team of creeping featurism, selling out the language to corporate interests, moving too fast, and turning a deaf ear to the Python community. What triggered this lava flow of accusations? The development team accepted a proposal to change the syntax of the print statement.

Stephen Figgins, 30 Aug 2000

INTERVIEWER: Tell us how you came to be drawn into the world of pragmas.

COMPILER WRITER: Well, it started off with little things. Just a few boolean flags, a way to turn asserts on and off, debug output, that sort of thing. I thought, what harm can it do? It's not like I'm doing anything you couldn't do with command line switches, right? Then it got a little bit heavier, integer values for optimisation levels, even the odd string or two. Before I knew it I was doing the real hard stuff, constant expressions, conditionals, the whole shooting box. Then one day when I put in a hook for making arbitrary calls into the interpreter, that was when I finally realised I had a problem...

Greg Ewing, 31 Aug 2000

The modules people have built for Python are like the roads the Romans built through Europe. On this solid ground, you can move fast as you work on aspects of program design that aren't so analytical -- user interface, multi-threaded event dispatching models, all kinds of things that can be done a lot of different ways and are hard to get right the first time through.

Donn Cave, 3 Sep 2000

Python 2.0 beta 1 is now available from BeOpen PythonLabs. There is a long list of new features since Python 1.6, released earlier today. We don't plan on any new releases in the next 24 hours.

Jeremy Hylton, in the 2.0b1 announcement, 5 Sep 2000

Fortunately, you've left that madness behind, and entered the clean, happy, and safe Python world of transvestite lumberjacks and singing Vikings.

Quinn Dunkan, 17 Sep 2000

Regular expressions are among my most valued tools, along with goto, eval, multiple inheritance, preemptive multithreading, floating point, run-time type identification, a big knife, a bottle of bleach, and 120VAC electricity. All of these things suck sometimes.

Kragen Sitaker, 27 Sep 2000

IIRC, he didn't much care for regexps before, but actually writing a regexp engine drives most people who do it to intense hatred.

Just more of the magic of Python! Transmuting a few peoples' intense agony into the subject of others' idle amusement <wink>.

Tim Peters, 27 Sep 2000

"I do not love thee, lambda; let me count the ways..."

Aahz Maruch, 27 Sep 2000

They are called "Exceptions" because to any policy for handling them, imposed in advance upon all programmers by the computer system, some programmers will have good reason to take exception.

William Kahan, quoted by Tim Peters, 13 Oct 2000

"Interim steps" have a tendency to become permanent in our industry, where "Compatibility" is the way the sins of the fathers are inflicted upon the third and fourth generations ...

William Kahan, quoted by Huaiyu Zhu, 16 Oct 2000

The most successful projects I've seen and been on did rewrite all the code routinely, but one subsystem at a time. This happens when you're tempted to add a hack, realize it wouldn't be needed if an entire area were reworked, and mgmt is bright enough to realize that hacks compound in fatal ways over time. The "ain't broke, don't fix" philosophy is a good guide here, provided you've got a very low threshold for insisting "it's broke".

Tim Peters, 25 Oct 2000

Humour is a tricky thing. Some people can't even get the spelling right.

Richard Brodie, 30 Oct 2000

The same way as you get the name of that cat you found on your porch: the cat (object) itself cannot tell you its name, and it doesn't really care -- so the only way to find out what it's called is to ask all your neighbours (namespaces) if it's their cat (object)...

....and don't be surprised if you'll find that it's known by many names, or no name at all!

Fredrik Lundh, 3 Nov 2000, in answer to the question "How can I get the name of a variable from C++ when I have the PyObject*?"

These are mostly nice features, to be sure, but they're also just that: features. C++ has features. Python doesn't have a stellar score on my elegance-o-meter, but for me its major win is the lack of features, and lack of ambiguities. It fits in my brain.

Quinn Dunkan, 18 Nov 2000

When explaining programming I sometimes compare programmers to photographers: amateur photographers talk about cameras and lenses and gadgets. They know how to make their camera do almost anything, and they are keen to argue the merits of their favorite tools. Professional photographers talk about contrast and lighting and composition. The camera is almost irrelevant. Ansel Adams used cameras that were less sophisticated than a supermarket disposable, back when photography was slow and tedious (like batch-oriented programming). Because the technology was so primitive, he carefully planned his photographs and developed discipline so he could reliably make excellent photographs over and over.

Greg Jorgensen, 26 Nov 2000

As you might have guessed, I didn't do this just for fun. It is the old game of explaining what is there, convincing everybody that you at least know what you are talking about, and then three days later coming up with an improved application of the theory.

Christian Tismer, 11 Dec 2000

Have they sprouted a new timbot, more geared towards newbies, more polite and friendly maybe, with a touch of human fallibility (hence the occasional slip of the keyboard) and named it Alex?

Carel Fellinger, 12 Dec 2000

I'm spending most of my waking hours understanding this patch -- it is a true piece of wizardry.

GvR, discussing a patch from Neil Schemenauer, 13 Dec 2000

Maybe they took solidity for granted, because, in their (Renaissance) times and in their (Architecture) calling, compromises regarding solidity were simply unthinkable. Well, we're not so lucky, in the software field, today; the Firmitas of by far most software around is imperfect.

We must live by "do the simplest thing that can possibly work" -- give solidity its proper, foremost place. One of the debilitating factors for much current software is a misplaced emphasis on assumed 'convenience' (funky GUIs, quirky shortcuts, special cases aplenty) to the detriment of solidity. A small but crucial step to reverse this trend, is to start by putting the order right once more... the way Vitruvius had it!

Alex Martelli, 13 Dec 2000

The Martellibot Mark 1 has a completely European flavour to it, and adds a cosmopolitan touch of linguistics to its output, sprinkling foreign language references in. It is similar to the timbot in its overall erudition, but can be distinguished from it by its tendency to indulge in flamewars (which, I believe, it does mostly to convince us it is human).

Steve Holden, 13 Dec 2000

In keeping with the religious nature of the battle-- and religion offers precise terms for degrees of damnation! --I suggest:

struggling -- a supported feature; the initial state of all features; may transition to Anathematized

anathematized -- this feature is now cursed, but is supported; may transition to Condemned or Struggling; intimacy with Anathematized features is perilous

condemned -- a feature scheduled for crucifixion; may transition to Crucified, Anathematized (this transition is called "a pardon"), or Struggling (this transition is called "a miracle"); intimacy with Condemned features is suicidal

crucified -- a feature that is no longer supported; may transition to Resurrected

resurrected -- a once-Crucified feature that is again supported; may transition to Condemned, Anathematized or Struggling; although since Resurrection is a state of grace, there may be no point in human time at which a feature is identifiably Resurrected (i.e., it may *appear*, to the unenlightened, that a feature moved directly from Crucified to Anathematized or Struggling or Condemned -- although saying so out loud is heresy).

Tim Peters, 18 Dec 2000

my-python-code-runs-5x-faster-this-month-thanks-to-dumping-$2K- on-a- new-machine-ly y'rs

Tim Peters, 26 Dec 2000

Really, I should pronounce on that PEP (I don't like it very much but haven't found the right argument to reject it :-) ) so this patch can either go in or be rejected.

GvR, 04 Jan 2001, in a comment on patch #101264

The rest is history: the glory, the fame, the riches, the groupies, the adulation of my peers. We won't mention the financial scandal and subsequent bankruptcy lest it discourage you for no good reason <wink>.

Tim Peters, 14 Jan 2001

If you're using anything besides US-ASCII, I stringly suggest Python 2.0.

Uche Ogbuji (A fortuitous typo?), 29 Jan 2001

"There goes Tim, browsing the Playboy site just for the JavaScript. Honest."

"Well, it's not like they had many floating-point numbers to ogle! I like 'em best when the high-order mantissa bits are all perky and regular, standing straight up, then go monster insane in the low-order bits, so you can't guess *what* bit might come next! Man, that's hot. Top it off with an exponent field with lots of ones, and you don't even need any oil. Can't say I've got a preference for sign bits, though -- zero and one can both be saucy treats. Zero is more of a tease, so I guess it depends on the mood."

Barry Warsaw and Tim Peters, 3 Feb 2001

We were sincerely hoping that the Python core team would teach their employers how to code Python, instead of the other way around...

Pieter Nagel, 5 Feb 2001

This bug fix brought to you by the letters b, c, d, g, h, ... and the reporter Ping.

Jeremy Hylton in a checkin message for Python/compile.c, 12 Feb 2001

"It's in ClassModules.py you dumb f**k - can't you tell by the name?"

"Furthermore, RTFM is much more effective if you do it gently and make them feel nicely embarrassed, rather than having them just say 'well, fuck you too' when reading the first insult, and not learn a thing."

"Thanks. I'll try to keep that in mind the next time I flame myself."

Phlip, following up to a query he'd posted earlier, and Thomas Wouters, 18 Feb 2001

"Also, does the simple algorithm you used in Cyclops have a name?"

"Not officially, but it answers to "hey, dumb-ass!"

Neil Schemenauer, interested in finding strongly connected components in graphs, and Tim Peters, 23 Feb 2001

Make this IDLE version 0.8. (We have to skip 0.7 because that was a CNRI release in a corner of the basement of a government building on a planet circling Aldebaran.)

GvR, in a CVS commit message, 22 Mar 2001

Python: programming the way Guido indented it.

Digital Creations T-shirt slogan at IPC9

Stackless Python: programming the way Guido prevented it.

Christian Tismer's title slide, at IPC9

I don't think we should use rational numbers for money because money isn't rational.

Moshe Zadka, at IPC9

We can't stop people from complaining but we can influence what they complain about.

Tim Peters, at IPC9

Perl is like vise grips. You can do anything with it but it is the wrong tool for every job.

Bruce Eckel, at IPC9

Given the choice between a good text editor and a good source control system, i'll take the source control, and use "cat" to write my code.

Greg Wilson, at IPC9

here's the eff-bot's favourite lambda refactoring rule:

1) write a lambda function
2) write a comment explaining what the heck that lambda does
3) study the comment for a while, and think of a name that captures
   the essence of the comment
4) convert the lambda to a def statement, using that name
5) remove the comment

Fredrik Lundh, 01 Apr 2001

The GPL tried to protect the freedom of end-users to modify and redistribute their code. Most people do not believe that this is a legitimate freedom like freedom of speech or assembly but Richard Stallman does. I don't think that there is an argument that that will persuade a person one way or another. If freedoms could be proven, that famous document would probably start: "Not everyone holds these truths to be self-evident, so we've worked up a proof of them as Appendix A."

Paul Prescod, 11 Apr 2001

That is one of the first goals. Also, we want to handle a C++ SAX stream with Python, and vice versa (feed a Python SAX stream into Xalan). Bi-SAXuality, in a sense. :)

Jürgen Hermann, 11 Apr 2001

As you seem totally unwilling or unable to understand that Weltanschauung to any extent, I don't see how you could bring Python any constructive enhancement (except perhaps by some random mechanism akin to monkeys banging away on typewriters until 'Hamlet' comes out, I guess).

Alex Martelli, 17 Apr 2001

"Are we more likely to add different concrete subclasses of Consumable in the future, or different concrete subclasses of Consumer? I suspect the former is more likely."

"With genetic engineering being the latest growth industry, I'm not sure that's true. Although I expect that any new models of cow, etc. will have a backwards compatible food-consumption protocol."

Alex Martelli and Greg Ewing, 19 Apr 2001

This property is called confluence, and the proof is called the Church -Rosser theorem. I'm sure you know this, of course, but somewhere out there there's a college student who is being shocked that CS is actually turning out to be relevant, for sufficiently small values of relevance.

Neelakantan Krishnaswami, 20 Apr 2001

if the style mafia finds out, you may find a badly severed list comprehension in your bed one morning, but I'd say the risk is very low.

Fredrik Lundh, 10 May 2001

1495 is a deservedly unpopular number. After all, Lorenzo de' Medici ("il Magnifico") died in 1492, and Giovanni de' Medici ("dalle Bande Nere") wasn't born until 1498, so 1495 fell right in the middle of a very boring and unusual lull where no really outstanding member of the Medici family (either branch) was around.

Alex Martelli, 24 May 2001

"What do you call the thing that pops up and says `Searching' or something to reassure the user that his computer hasn't crashed and the application is still running?"

"On Windows, that's called 'a miracle'."

Laura Creighton and Tim Peters, 28 May 2001

In general, my conclusion after doing numerical work for a while is that the desire to look at algorithms crucial to your research as black boxes is futile. In the end, I always had to dig into the details of the algorithms because they were either never black-boxable or the black-box versions didn't do a good enough job.

David Ascher, 28 May 2001

"Oh, read all Kahan has written, and if you emerge still thinking you know what you're doing when floating point is involved, you're either Tim Peters, or the world champ of hubris."

"I find it's possible to be both <wink>."

Alex Martelli and Tim Peters, 20 May 2001

Wow, this almost looks like a real flamefest. ("Flame" being defined as the presence of metacomments.)

GvR, 13 Jun 2001

"Maybe we also have a smaller brain than the typical Lisper -- I would say, that would make us more normal, and if Python caters to people with a closer-to-average brain size, that would mean more people will be able to program in Python. History will decide..."

"I thought it already has, pretty much."

GvR and A.M. Kuchling, 14 Jun 2001

Did Guido use the time machine to get a copy of the GoF book before he started working on the first version of Python, or are Patterns just a transparent attempt to cover for chronically inexpressive languages like C++ and Java which can't generally implement these mind-numbingly simple constructs in code?

Glyph Lefkowitz, 7 Jun 2001

Google confuses me; if you search for "michael hudson" my page is the third hit -- but my name doesn't actually appear anywhere on the linked page! The "did you mean to search for..." feature is also downright uncanny. They've clearly sold their souls to the devil -- there's no other explanation.

Michael Hudson, 28 Jun 2001

You didn't say what you want to accomplish. If the idea of "provably correct" programs appeals to you, Eiffel will give you more help than any other practical language I know of. But since your post didn't lay out your assumptions, your goals, or how you view language characteristics as fitting in with either, you're not a natural candidate for embracing Design by Contract <0.6 wink>.

Tim Peters, 3 Jun 2001

The static people talk about rigorously enforced interfaces, correctness proofs, contracts, etc. The dynamic people talk about rigorously enforced testing and say that types only catch a small portion of possible errors. The static people retort that they don't trust tests to cover everything or not have bugs and why write tests for stuff the compiler should test for you, so you shouldn't rely on only tests, and besides static types don't catch a small portion, but a large portion of errors. The dynamic people say no program or test is perfect and static typing is not worth the cost in language complexity and design difficulty for the gain in eliminating a few tests that would have been easy to write anyway, since static types catch a small portion of errors, not a large portion. The static people say static types don't add that much language complexity, and it's not design "difficulty" but an essential part of the process, and they catch a large portion, not a small portion. The dynamic people say they add enormous complexity, and they catch a small portion, and point out that the static people have bad breath. The static people assert that the dynamic people must be too stupid to cope with a real language and rigorous requirements, and are ugly besides.

This is when both sides start throwing rocks.

Quinn Dunkan, 13 Jul 2001

I am becoming convinced that Unicode is a multi-national plot to take over the minds of our most gifted (and/or most obsessive) programmers, in pursuit of an elusive, unresolvable, and ultimately, undefinable goal.

Ken Manheimer, 19 Jul 2001

Unicode is the first technology I have to deal with which makes me hope I die before I really really really need to understand it fully.

David Ascher, 19 Jul 2001

Moore's law is slowly making type declarations irrelevant...

Paul Prescod, 29 Jul 2001

The mark of a mature programmer is willingness to throw out code you spent time on when you realize it's pointless.

Bram Cohen, 20 Sep 2001

Generators and iterators are among the most loving features ever introduced. They will give and give, without ever asking anything from you save the privilege of gracing your code, waiting with eager anticipation for you to resume them at your pleasure, or even to discard them if you tire of their charms. In fact, they're almost pathologically yielding.

Tim Peters, 18 Oct 2001

IMO a bunch of the frustration I sometimes feel with Python comes from its originally being intended as a "glue" language. It's too good for that, and finds itself used as a work horse or even a race horse. Neither type of horse belongs in the glue factory ;-).

Paul Rubin, 30 Oct 2001

"Which inevitably has the followup rhyme 'There was a young man from Verdun'."

"But somehow no one ever seems to be able to remember what it was about the man from Abdero."

Simon Callan and Gareth McCaughan, 04 Nov 2001, after someone quoted the limerick "There was a young man from Wooloomooloo / Whose limericks always finished on line two."

Sometimes I feel like I'm reinventing Zope, but at least it's a Zope I understand.

Quinn Dunkan, 05 Nov 2001 on the quixote-users list

Homological algebra beckons -- brain relief in this context!

Michael Hudson, 07 Nov 2001, in a discussion of Stackless Python

If you're talking "useful", I'm not your bot.

Tim Peters, 08 Nov 2001

"How do you do a range of floats?"

"Bring flowers, and buy them all nice dinners. Try not to be too obvious that you're out to do them, though."

Thomas Wouters and Tim Peters, 09 Nov 2001

Changing diapers reminded Guido that he wanted to allow for some measure of multiple inheritance from a mix of new- and classic-style classes.

Tim Peters in a checkin message, 14 Nov 2001

My late father-in-law, Ray Pigozzi, was an extremely talented architect (he was made a fellow of the AIA in the late 70's or early 80's), and although he was by all accounts an excellent mentor to younger architects in the firm he cofounded, he also had the well- deserved reputation of being quite laconic (this I know from personal experience ;-). Early in his career, he received an award from some masonry organization for his use of brick in building OWP (now OWP&P) had designed. This necessitated the usual awards ceremony with dinner and speeches. The recipients who preceeded Ray to the podium all spoke at length about their work. Ray's entire acceptance speech was, "The building speaks for itself."

Skip Montanaro, 4 Jan 2002

The Lisp community is like a ghost town, with the occasional banshee howl echoing darkly around the chamber in lament of what might have been.

Courageous, 19 Jan 2002

I'll lend you Calendrical Calculations. Even skimming the chapters on some of the world's other calendrical delights makes our date gimmicks blind via the intensity of their clarity.

Tim Peters, 05 Mar 2002

The joy of coding Python should be in seeing short, concise, readable classes that express a lot of action in a small amount of clear code -- not in reams of trivial code that bores the reader to death.

GvR, 20 Mar 2002

A bot may injure a human being, or, preferably, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm, although laughing about either in the hearing of humans is MACNAM-017B3^H.

Tim Peters, 26 Mar 2002

"It works in Scheme" doesn't give me the warm fuzzy feeling that it's been tried in real life.

GvR, 02 Oct 2002

Most recipes are short enough for the attention span of the average Python programmer.

GvR — In the introduction to the Python Cookbook

We read Knuth so you don't have to.

Tim Peters — Python Cookbook

Here's another technique that is faster and more obvious but that is often avoided by those who mistakenly believe that writing two lines of code where one might do is somehow sinful.

Tim Peters — Python Cookbook

A fruitful approach to problem solving is known as "divide and conquer", or making problems easier by splitting their different aspects apart. Making problems harder by joining several aspects together must be an example of an approach known as "unite and suffer!"

Alex Martelli — Python Cookbook

compromise-is-the-art-of-spreading-misery-ly y'rs

Tim Peters, 11 Dec 2002

As for Grail, it was certainly a "hot product" in the Python community in 1995 because of the restricted execution environment which I evaluated for a project involving mobile software agents. How priorities and trends have changed since then! Who would have thought that Microsoft Outlook would be the premier platform for mobile code?

Paul Boddie, 16 Jan 2004

I mean, if I think about my open-source contributions, nobody wants to see talks with these titles:

* The Zope API Reference: Ouch

* A Random Handful Of Bugs I've Fixed In Other Peoples' Code

* An Old Crufty Project I Inherited That Has Zero Relevance To You

* The Joy of Preemptive Abandonware: Release Late, If Ever (or, Software Design as a Nihilistic Abstract Art Form) (or, Sourceforge as a Medium for Cryptic Time Capsules)

Paul Winkler, 14 Mar 2005