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author | Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org> | 1998-08-07 17:45:09 (GMT) |
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committer | Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org> | 1998-08-07 17:45:09 (GMT) |
commit | aee5e26f4b917d2db2e255a3b86f70d747386763 (patch) | |
tree | cc1b305ac162b2853faff244f550add4677b8d87 /Doc/tut/tut.tex | |
parent | 1a0b87266540c6da06d3dd62248b1a4be660631a (diff) | |
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Add warning that mutable argument defaults are evaluated only once;
with examples and workaround. This keeps coming up, and I believe
that this section in the tutorial may have been (in part) the source
of the confusion. While it didn't show examples with [] for a default,
it also didn't emphasize enough why that would be a bad idea, and
while it did say that defaults are evaluated at the point of function
definition, the example was not relevant for this issue.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/tut/tut.tex')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/tut/tut.tex | 39 |
1 files changed, 39 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/tut/tut.tex b/Doc/tut/tut.tex index 6c110a9..121e4c1 100644 --- a/Doc/tut/tut.tex +++ b/Doc/tut/tut.tex @@ -1186,6 +1186,39 @@ f() will print \code{5}. +\strong{Important warning:} The default value is evaluated only once. +This makes a difference when the default is a mutable object such as a +list or dictionary. For example, the following function accumulates +the arguments passed to it on subsequent calls: + +\begin{verbatim} +def f(a, l = []): + l.append(a) + return a +print f(1) +print f(2) +print f(3) +\end{verbatim} + +This will print + +\begin{verbatim} +[1] +[1, 2] +[1, 2, 3] +\end{verbatim} + +If you don't want the default to be shared between subsequent calls, +you can write the function like this instead: + +\begin{verbatim} +def f(a, l = None): + if l is None: + l = [] + l.append(a) + return a +\end{verbatim} + \subsection{Keyword Arguments} \label{keywordArgs} @@ -1574,6 +1607,7 @@ number of elements as the length of the tuple. Note that multiple assignment is really just a combination of tuple packing and tuple unpacking! +% XXX This is no longer necessary! Occasionally, the corresponding operation on lists is useful: \emph{list unpacking}. This is supported by enclosing the list of variables in square brackets: @@ -1583,6 +1617,9 @@ square brackets: >>> [a1, a2, a3, a4] = a \end{verbatim} +% XXX Add a bit on the difference between tuples and lists. +% XXX Also explain that a tuple can *contain* a mutable object! + \section{Dictionaries} \label{dictionaries} @@ -1858,6 +1895,8 @@ This imports all names except those beginning with an underscore \subsection{The Module Search Path} \label{searchPath} +% XXX Need to document that a lone .pyc/.pyo is acceptable too! + \indexiii{module}{search}{path} When a module named \module{spam} is imported, the interpreter searches for a file named \file{spam.py} in the current directory, |