Strangely, I just received two edits to one of my answers. Both edits were approved by 1 user and rejected by 2 users.
- https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/24049936 (no improvement)
- https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/24062680 (vandalism)
Receiving an edit on one of my answers is very rare (possibly under 1%). Receiving two incorrect edits on the same answer with approvals is... rarer. What's going on?
l
variable name withxs
on every answer, forcing your arbitrary convention on millions of people. Nobody is confusingl
with1
in a tiny code snippet like this one. Python is not Haskell. Nobody uses "xs
" as a variable name in Python.l
is obviously "list",xs
being short for "a bunch of 'X's" is not obvious to anyone who doesn't already know Haskell.l
with the non-sensicalt
xs
is an elegant choice for generic lists since one can then dofor x in xs
. For specific lists, we use plural/singular in the same way, e.g.for name in names
orfor word in words
. One could also usefor item in items
for generic lists, though that gets wordy in a comprehension, anditem
doesn't convey any more information thanx
does. Butl
should not be used as a variable name, as PEP-8 enforces, as do Pylint and PEP-8 compliant linters.xs
was already there in that link. I assume you meant this one instead. Anecdotally, here's an edit where I thought a1
was anl
while trying to rename thel
variables!