I don't see any uses of anything that could look like a ternary operator in your patch. Maybe you wrote code then trashed it, or used a ternary operator in another Python project?
In any case, the code looks clean, but I'll change the unit test files a bit and make some test classes.
I don't see any uses of anything that could look like a ternary operator in your patch. Maybe you wrote code then trashed it, or used a ternary operator in another Python project?
In any case, the code looks clean, but I'll change the unit test files a bit and make some test classes.