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author | R David Murray <rdmurray@bitdance.com> | 2013-05-20 14:33:27 (GMT) |
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committer | R David Murray <rdmurray@bitdance.com> | 2013-05-20 14:33:27 (GMT) |
commit | 63f72908a18d10a8f5786ad6929d5c770c8c0e9e (patch) | |
tree | 2745181ece2c5b114517a0d564160827600fdade /Doc/faq | |
parent | 2a9c8e8cd316f7463585e8d1ed76b0bfa6a77f5c (diff) | |
parent | bcf06d364df2b2a69dd419124b218f44284d43df (diff) | |
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Merge #17973: Add FAQ entry for ([],)[0] += [1] both extending and raising.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/faq')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/faq/programming.rst | 83 |
1 files changed, 83 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/faq/programming.rst b/Doc/faq/programming.rst index 0f4d148..7713450 100644 --- a/Doc/faq/programming.rst +++ b/Doc/faq/programming.rst @@ -1103,6 +1103,89 @@ Use a list comprehension:: result = [obj.method() for obj in mylist] +Why does a_tuple[i] += ['item'] raise an exception when the addition works? +--------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +This is because of a combination of the fact that augmented assignment +operators are *assignment* operators, and the difference between mutable and +immutable objects in Python. + +This discussion applies in general when augmented assignment operators are +applied to elements of a tuple that point to mutable objects, but we'll use +a ``list`` and ``+=`` as our exemplar. + +If you wrote:: + + >>> a_tuple = (1, 2) + >>> a_tuple[0] += 1 + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + TypeError: 'tuple' object does not support item assignment + +The reason for the exception should be immediately clear: ``1`` is added to the +object ``a_tuple[0]`` points to (``1``), producing the result object, ``2``, +but when we attempt to assign the result of the computation, ``2``, to element +``0`` of the tuple, we get an error because we can't change what an element of +a tuple points to. + +Under the covers, what this augmented assignment statement is doing is +approximately this:: + + >>> result = a_tuple[0].__iadd__(1) + >>> a_tuple[0] = result + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + TypeError: 'tuple' object does not support item assignment + +It is the assignment part of the operation that produces the error, since a +tuple is immutable. + +When you write something like:: + + >>> a_tuple = (['foo'], 'bar') + >>> a_tuple[0] += ['item'] + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + TypeError: 'tuple' object does not support item assignment + +The exception is a bit more surprising, and even more surprising is the fact +that even though there was an error, the append worked:: + + >>> a_tuple[0] + ['foo', 'item'] + +To see why this happens, you need to know that for lists, ``__iadd__`` is equivalent +to calling ``extend`` on the list and returning the list. That's why we say +that for lists, ``+=`` is a "shorthand" for ``list.extend``:: + + >>> a_list = [] + >>> a_list += [1] + >>> a_list + [1] + +is equivalent to:: + + >>> result = a_list.__iadd__([1]) + >>> a_list = result + +The object pointed to by a_list has been mutated, and the pointer to the +mutated object is assigned back to ``a_list``. The end result of the +assignment is a no-op, since it is a pointer to the same object that ``a_list`` +was previously pointing to, but the assignment still happens. + +Thus, in our tuple example what is happening is equivalent to:: + + >>> result = a_tuple[0].__iadd__(['item']) + >>> a_tuple[0] = result + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + TypeError: 'tuple' object does not support item assignment + +The ``__iadd__`` succeeds, and thus the list is extended, but even though +``result`` points to the same object that ``a_tuple[0]`` already points to, +that final assignment still results in an error, because tuples are immutable. + + Dictionaries ============ |