The Python Oracle

Python : When is a variable passed by reference and when by value?

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Track title: Forest of Spells Looping

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Chapters
00:00 Python : When Is A Variable Passed By Reference And When By Value?
00:43 Answer 1 Score 3
00:54 Answer 2 Score 8
01:11 Answer 3 Score 10
01:41 Answer 4 Score 73
03:23 Thank you

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Full question
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9696...

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Content licensed under CC BY-SA
https://meta.stackexchange.com/help/lice...

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Tags
#python #reference #passbyreference #passbyvalue

#avk47



ANSWER 1

Score 73


Effbot (aka Fredrik Lundh) has described Python's variable passing style as call-by-object: http://effbot.org/zone/call-by-object.htm

Objects are allocated on the heap and pointers to them can be passed around anywhere.

  • When you make an assignment such as x = 1000, a dictionary entry is created that maps the string "x" in the current namespace to a pointer to the integer object containing one thousand.
  • When you update "x" with x = 2000, a new integer object is created and the dictionary is updated to point at the new object. The old one thousand object is unchanged (and may or may not be alive depending on whether anything else refers to the object).
  • When you do a new assignment such as y = x, a new dictionary entry "y" is created that points to the same object as the entry for "x".
  • Objects like strings and integers are immutable. This simply means that there are no methods that can change the object after it has been created. For example, once the integer object one-thousand is created, it will never change. Math is done by creating new integer objects.
  • Objects like lists are mutable. This means that the contents of the object can be changed by anything pointing to the object. For example, x = []; y = x; x.append(10); print y will print [10]. The empty list was created. Both "x" and "y" point to the same list. The append method mutates (updates) the list object (like adding a record to a database) and the result is visible to both "x" and "y" (just as a database update would be visible to every connection to that database).

Hope that clarifies the issue for you.




ANSWER 2

Score 10


It doesn't help in Python to think in terms of references or values. Neither is correct.

In Python, variables are just names. In your for loop, loc is just a name that points to the current element in the list. Doing loc = [] simply rebinds the name loc to a different list, leaving the original version alone.

But since in your example, each element is a list, you could actually mutate that element, and that would be reflected in the original list:

for loc in locs:
    loc[0] = loc[0] * 2



ANSWER 3

Score 8


When you say

loc = []

you are rebinding the loc variable to a newly created empty list

Perhaps you want

loc[:] = []

Which assigns a slice (which happens to be the whole list) of loc to the empty list




ANSWER 4

Score 3


Everything is passed by object. Rebinding and mutating are different operations.

locs = [ [1], [2] ]
for loc in locs:
    del loc[:]

print locs