>>102439051
It's bare-bones and clunky, if not hacky - which in itself wouldn't be a big problem if Python wasn't 100% OOP down to the core.
For example, list(map(lambda i: print(("Fizz"*(i%3 == 0) + "Buzz"*(i%5 == 0)) or i), range(1, 101)))
- True and False behave like 1 and 0 in numerical contexts, the bool class is a subclass of int.
This silly stuff can be nice occasionally, but anything to do with metaclasses, no private instance variables and methods, sunders and dunders, things like enums that technically exist in the standard library but I don't think anyone actually uses - it's all just awkward.
Contrast with Ruby, which is like Moon fairy technology in comparison.