A post about how this community’s banner used the python 2 print syntax - print "Hello World" - made me question, can we print a hello world message in Python 3 without using parentheses?

It turned out to be sort of a fun challenge, I’ve found 3 different approaches that work. I’d be interested to see what you come up with! (it seems I can’t put spoilers in Lemmy, so I won’t share my solutions yet in case y’all want to have a go).

Edit: Posted my solutions in the comments

You can put spoilers in posts or comments this way:

::: spoiler Title
Secret
:::

Here is how it renders:

Title

Secret

(AFAIK apps don’t render these correctly, only the website)

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6 points

Can confirm not hiding on Memmy

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5 points

Same on Jerboa. Though given the apps’ fast development progress we probably won’t have to wait too long :)

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1 point

Not working on connect either

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7 points

Just one question: why?

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3 points

You could base64 encode the solution

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3 points

But then you still need to use parentheses to decode it

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2 points

Ah sorry I meant for the spoiler. He could base64 the solution given that he doesn’t know how to do spoilers on lemmy

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1 point

Ah true that would have worked, figured since spoilers don’t work on most apps I might as well just post them.

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2 points

Gave some thoughts but couldn’t find any. I need the solutions

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7 points

Alright, here are my solutions :)

  1. Import Easter egg
import __hello__

Not the most technically interesting, but a fun Easter egg!

  1. Class decorators
@print
@lambda _: "Hello World"
class Foo: 
    ...

Decorators are another way of calling a function, so can be abused to solve this task. You need to decorate a class rather than a function though, since a function definition requires parentheses!

  1. Dunder methods
class Printer:
    __class_getitem__ = print

Printer["Hello World"]

There might be some other Dunder methods you can use to do this, although it’s sort of difficult since most (e.g. __add__) only describe behaviour on the instance of the class.

  1. More dunder methods
from _sitebuiltins import Quitter
Quitter.__add__ = print
exit + "Hello World"

Writing number 3 made me realise I just needed to find a class that already had an instance and change that. I’m sure there are many other cases of this, but here’s one!

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1 point

Very interesting solutions. I was in the direction of using dunder methods but could not figure out how. Haven’t heard of the __class_getitem__. The second solution is especially inspiring.

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