Prologue
This post is part of a series on Python's syntactic sugar. The latest source code can be found as part of the desugar project.
Introduction
Python has something called augmented
[This post has been updated multiple times since it's initial posting; see the Corrections section at the end for what was changed.]
The reaction to my blog post on unravelling attribute
I wonder how many people realize that Python has a lot of syntactic sugar
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syntactic_sugar]? I'm not claiming it's like a
Lisp-based language
Why ask this question?
It's no secret that I want a Python implementation for WebAssembly
[https://webassembly.org/]. It would not only get Python into the browser, but
with the fact
Back in 2017 I wrote a blog post on how I manage version numbers
[https://snarky.ca/how-i-manage-package-version-numbers/]. In that post I mentioned
how I tried to follow semantic versioning [https://semver.org/