I know that semicolons are unnecessary in Python, but they can be used to cram multiple statements onto a single line, e.g.
>>> x = 42; y = 54
I always thought that a semicolon was equivalent to a line break. So I was a bit surprised to learn (h/t Ned Batchelder on Twitter) that a double semicolon is a SyntaxError:
>>> x = 42
>>> x = 42;
>>> x = 42;;
File "<stdin>", line 1
x = 42;;
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
I assumed the last program was equivalent to x = 42\n\n
. I’d have thought the statement between the semicolons was treated as an empty line, a no-op. Apparently not.
Why is this an error?
if condition:;
would also be legal, but it is not.print [1, 2,, 3]
to work? It's pretty much the same thing.