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by theg5prank
2126 days ago
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> It's emphatically not "having a super keyword" or not having it. That's a red herring. Visual C++ has __super and yet it doesn't suffer from this: it errors with "ambiguous call to overloaded function" when there are multiple candidates What's your point about this nonstandard extension? My point is that C++ doesn't have the problem of classes not written to be part of a multiple inheritance hierarchy delegating somewhere unexpected because, by design, it doesn't attempt to solve the same problems that Python is. If anything that this nonstandard extension doesn't work in multiple inheritance is agreeing with the points I'm making. > There's a lot more I could say about this (frankly the issue I outlined just scratch the surface of a deeper problem in Python), but this is diverting the discussion. Nobody even said C++ is simple or somehow easier to learn than Python in the first place; I was just pointing out an insidious issue in Python, You were the one who brought up C++! (EDIT: this was in a cousin comment.) My point is that different languages navigate this thorny landscape in different ways, but the way in which Python does isn't as haphazard as you are suggesting. > Exercise for the reader: suggest improvements Perhaps being part of a multiple inheritance hierarchy is sharp and uncommon enough that it should be opt-in. What are yours? |
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My point was what I said: you can have your cake and eat it too. You claimed the issue was due to a lack of a super keyword and I showed you it would not occur even if C++ had super.
> You were the one who brought up C++!
I "brought it up" to illustrate it does one particular thing better than Python. Not to claim it does everything better than Python. If you want a simple, beginner-friendly language, avoid C++ like the plague.
> What are yours?
Idk, for starters maybe produce a warning when multiple inheritance occurs and one of the __init__s in the hierarchy doesn't have an obvious call super().__init__.