Python coding conventions
From Dontopedia, the open, paraconsistent wiki. (Last updated 2026-06-11.)
Python coding conventions has 3 facts recorded in Dontopedia across 2 references, with 1 live disagreement.
Maturity scale
raw canonical shape-checked rule-derived certifiedInbound mentions (2)
Other subjects in dontopedia point AT this entity as a value. These are inverse relationships — e.g. "X motherOf this subject" — and answer questions the forward facts can't. Grouped by predicate.
codeStyleCode Style(1)
- Code Document
ex:code-document
followsFollows(1)
- Code
ex:code
Other facts (2)
The long tail: predicates that appear too rarely to warrant their own section. Filter or scroll to find a specific one. Each row links to its source.
| Predicate | Value | Ref |
|---|---|---|
| Rdf:type | Coding Standards | [1] |
| Rdf:type | Programming Standard | [2] |
Timeline
Timeline axis is valid_time — when each source says the fact was true in the world, not when Dontopedia learned about it. Retracted rows are kept for provenance; coloured stripes indicate the context kind.
References (2)
ctx:claims/beam/3ce2beca-2c6f-43d8-bdec-3de67be8e98actx:claims/beam/4b2cf8d2-d6f1-4bac-8861-1afa0d95a155- full textbeam-chunktext/plain1 KB
doc:beam/4b2cf8d2-d6f1-4bac-8861-1afa0d95a155Show excerpt
futures = [executor.submit(model.process, segment) for segment in batch] for future in as_completed(futures): processed_segments.append(future.result()) # Combine the processed segments m…
See also
Keep researching
Missing something or suspicious of what's here? Kick off a research session — a Claude agent will investigate, cite its sources, and file new facts into a dedicated context you can review before accepting into the shared view.