I realise that if you have an iterable you should always use .join(iterable) instead of for x in y: str += x. But if there's only a fixed number of variables that aren't already in an iterable, is using .join() still the recommended way?
For example I have
user = 'username'
host = 'host'
should I do
ret = user + '@' + host
or
ret = '@'.join([user, host])
I'm not so much asking from a performance point of view, since both will be pretty trivial. But I've read people on here say always use .join and I was wondering if there's any particular reason for that or if it's just generally a good idea to use .join.
'%s@%s' % (user, host). – Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams Nov 12 '10 at 16:20