Introduction Python is very flexible in the way it allows you to overload various features of its syntax. For example most of the binary operators can be overloaded. But one part of the syntax that can't be overloaded is list comprehension ie. expressions like [f(x) for x in y]. What might it mean to overload this notation? Let's consider something simpler first, overloading the binary operator +.
It's one of the fundamental mathematical problems of our time, and its importance grows with the rise of powerful computers. When editor-in-chief Moshe Vardi asked me to write this piece for Communications, my first reaction was the article could be written in two words: Still open. When I started graduate school in the mid-1980s, many believed that the quickly developing area of circuit complexit
In his Pycon 2012 keynote speech on Sunday, Guido van Rossum covered many of the open “Troll” questions related to the Python community. I’ve had occasion to either complain about or defend all of the topics he covered, and he did a wonderful job of addressing them. The issues could largely be divided into two categories: those that come from a fundamental misunderstanding of why Python is wonderf
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