Python allows programmers to pass additional arguments to functions via comments. Now armed with this knowledge head out and spread it to all code bases.
Feel free to use the code I wrote in your projects.
Link to the source code: https://github.com/raldone01/python_lessons_py/blob/main/lesson_0_comments.ipynb
Image transcription:
from lib import add
# Go ahead and change the comments.
# See how python uses them as arguments.
result = add() # 1 2
print(result)
result = add() # 3 4
print(result)
result = add() # 3 4 5 20
print(result)
Output:
3
7
32
use std::fs; fn add_from_comment(file: &str, line: u32) -> f64 { let source = fs::read_to_string(file).expect("Failed to read source file"); let source_line = source.lines().nth((line - 1) as usize).expect("Line not found"); if let Some(comment_start) = source_line.find("//") { let comment = &source_line[comment_start + 2..].trim(); let numbers: Vec<f64> = comment .split_whitespace() .map(|num| num.parse::<f64>().expect("Invalid number in comment")) .collect(); return numbers.iter().sum(); } 0.0 } macro_rules! add { () => { add_from_comment(file!(), line!()) }; } fn main() { let result = add!(); // 7 8 9 println!("{}", result); // Outputs: 24 let result2 = add!(); // 1 4 3 println!("{}", result2); // outputs 8 }
Nice I would have tried it with a build script but this works too. Good job!!!