This is -- well -- it is what it is. I don't have to like it.
>>> t_s = (8063599, 0) >>> fields = [(t_s := divmod(t_s[0], b))[1] for b in (60, 60, 24, 7)] >>> list(reversed(fields + [t_s[0]])) [13, 2, 7, 53, 19]
It works and shows how the assignment operator works.
The point here is to convert a timestamp into ISO week, day, hour,
minute, second. 13th week, 2nd day, 7h, 53m, 19s.
The divmod() function returns a two-tuple, which the assignment
operator can't decompose. Instead, we decompose it by wrapping the
whole thing in ()[1].
Works.
Do Not Recommend.
Black fails to format over-length line containing ...
Robert Lucente<noreply@blogger.com>
2019-12-27 14:45:40.359000-05:00
Black fails to format over-length line containing walrus operator https://github.com/psf/black/issues/1194