Spyke
lemmy.ndlug.org

Path objects also override the / operator to join paths

This is both cool and gross... gives me C++ vibes (operator overloading abuse).

7

Scapy is another library where they redefined / to layer packets, such that you can write:

IP(dst="172.23.34.45") / UDP() / DNS(…)

Then Scapy has magic so that on serialisation, the UDP layer knows defaults to dport=53 if the upper layer is DNS, and it can access the lower layer to compute its checksum.

And don't forget that strings have a custom % (as in modulo) operator for formatting:

"Hello %s" %(username)

Of course in modern Python, f-strings will almost always be more convenient

4
lemmy.world

They could have chosen a better operator. But the functionality is fantastic. Makes working with paths so much easier. And you can even use slashes on windows paths.

2
ledsreply
feddit.dk

It makes the code so much more clean and readable since you're dropping multiple levels of brackets , for example

os.path.join( a, b, os.path.dirname(c))

Becomes

a / b / c.parent

I really like it

8
unalivejoyreply
lemm.ee

Don't forget about the helper functions mypath.read_text() and mypath.write_text(content)

1

Today I realised, we all prefer semantics matching oriental language semantics.
English: Open my path.
Same sentence in Hindi semantics would be: My path open.

-1

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Python's pathlib module | Spyke