Comment by skeledrew
You see it as a rationalization, while I see it as good sense. After all he also mentioned the "puzzles solvers" who solved the "puzzle", and some would likely have happily provided an implementation if he had given the go-ahead. But he outright refused specifically because "... a user interface can handle only so much complexity or it becomes unusable". You don't need to try putting words in his mouth after he specifically stated that maintaining a simple user interface is higher priority.
And the really ironic thing is that we wouldn't even be having this discussion now if not for this focus, because Python wouldn't have gained such popularity to the point it's also attracting more folk who would destroy what makes it so popular in the first place.
> You don't need to try putting words in his mouth after he specifically stated that maintaining a simple user interface is higher priority.
I'm not trying to put words in his mouth (I'm pretty sure I delineated his direct quotes with quotation marks). But I saw him write multiple paragraphs about the complexity of lexing multi-statement lambdas in Python due to its whitespace sensitivity, and then conclude that the user facing interface must necessarily be complex too, which just feels fallacious to me. If the complexity of the implementation doesn't factor into the design then why go through so much effort to communicate how difficult it is to lex? He compares the implementation to a "2000 step [...] infinite-dimensional" mathematical proof.
I just fundamentally don't buy the argument that one statement in a lambda is fine, but two is dark magic that needs to be removed from the call site and quarantined in a separate def, and I think if the implementation were simpler GVR wouldn't have been so diametrically opposed to the feature. Even if he outsourced the "puzzle solving" to an external contributor, no one enjoys the increased maintenance burden of a complex implementation.
Anyone who's ever written customer facing code knows what it's like to receive a seemingly simple feature request that's actually difficult to implement because of prior architectural decisions, and the "gut reaction" is to convince the user that the feature itself is bad. I hate to invoke comedy but this reminds me of the microservices meme: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8OnoxKotPQ