[Python-Dev] unsubscriptable vs object does not support indexing (original) (raw)
Janzert janzert at janzert.com
Thu Sep 24 01:56:22 CEST 2009
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Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Thu, 24 Sep 2009 06:47:41 am Dino Viehland wrote:
So I am +1 on unified the message and +1 on using the "does not support indexing" one. I'd be +1 on the unified message as well - but it seems what that message should be may be contentious (and quite a bike shed discussion at that). The bug David linked to (http://bugs.python.org/issue5760) has a preference for subscript because that's what's used elsewhere in the language. For what it's worth, "unsubscriptable object" seems to me to be mysterious to many newbies, and even a few non-newbies. It took me something like seven years of coding to stop reading it as "unscriptable object", and I'm sure I won't be the only one. As far as I can see, in practice, people talk about obj[i] as the item at index i, not the item at subscript i -- the term "subscript" in this context seems to be rare to non-existent except for the error message.
How about if it's obj["item"]? To me the following makes complete sense, but then it seems that I may just be the odd one out.
class A(object): ... pass ... a = A() a[1] Traceback (most recent call last): File "", line 1, in TypeError: 'A' object is unindexable a["a"] Traceback (most recent call last): File "", line 1, in TypeError: 'A' object is unsubscriptable
Janzert
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