No sure where (maybe on the review), but John Griffith made a comment I agree with, that maybe we actually prefer to be explicit about our defaults (Tao of Python and all that), rather than requiring implicit knowledge of the cfg module. Always requiring a default, even if it is None, might make for more readable code.
No sure where (maybe on the review), but John Griffith made a comment I agree with, that maybe we actually prefer to be explicit about our defaults (Tao of Python and all that), rather than requiring implicit knowledge of the cfg module. Always requiring a default, even if it is None, might make for more readable code.
Thoughts?