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by mkl
355 days ago
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* does different things depending on the types of the operands, which is Python's strong typing at work, not Perlesque weak typing. Repeating a string is a useful thing to be able to do, and this is a natural choice of syntax for it. The same thing works for lists: [1]*3 == [1, 1, 1]. |
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More broadly this is the same argument as whether overloading `+` for strings is a bad idea or not, and the associated points, e.g. the fact that this makes it non-commutative - the same all applies to `*` as well, and to lists as much as strings. At least Python is consistent here.
Although there is one particular aspect that is IMO just bad design: the way `x += y` and `x = y` work. To remind, for lists these are not equivalent to `x = x + y` and `x = x y` - instead of creating a new list, they mutate the existing one in place, so all the references observe the change. This is very surprising and inconsistent with the same operators for numbers, or indeed for strings and tuples.