I am working on a rudimentary Breakout clone, and I was doing the wall collision. I have a function that I initially treated as a Boolean, but I changed it to return a different value depending on which wall the ball hit. I used the walrus operator to capture this value while still treating the function like a bool. I probably could have just defined a variable as the function’s return value, then used it in an if statement. But it felt good to use this new thing I’d only heard about, and didn’t really understand what it did. I was honestly kind of surprised when it actually worked like I was expecting it to! Pretty cool.

You are viewing a single thread.
View all comments
-12 points
Removed by mod
permalink
report
reply

Python

!python@programming.dev

Create post

Welcome to the Python community on the programming.dev Lemmy instance!

📅 Events
Past

November 2023

October 2023

July 2023

August 2023

September 2023

🐍 Python project:
💓 Python Community:
✨ Python Ecosystem:
🌌 Fediverse
Communities
Projects
  • Pythörhead: a Python library for interacting with Lemmy
  • Plemmy: a Python package for accessing the Lemmy API
  • pylemmy pylemmy enables simple access to Lemmy’s API with Python
  • mastodon.py, a Python wrapper for the Mastodon API
Feeds

Community stats

  • 801

    Monthly active users

  • 467

    Posts

  • 2.4K

    Comments