We introduced functions way back in Module 1 and they have served us well (and will continue to do so!). There are a few behaviors that bear closer examination before we dive too deeply into the next lessons. These are all common Python gotchas! that will continue to rear their heads, so it's better that you know about them now to avoid a large amount of hair-pulling when they crop up.
There is a fantastic talk from PyCon 2015 by Ned Batchelder on YouTube that will walk you through all of the things below and more, but we'll also include a short summary of some of the issues.
When we want a variable x
to have a value of 5, we assign the name x
to the value 5
.
x = 5
print(x)
5
Integers are immutable. They don't change. If we assign another name y
to be equal to x
, there is no operation we can perform on y
that will change x
(or the 5).
y = x
print(y)
print(x)
5 5
y += 1
print(y)
print(x)
6 5
Some datatypes are mutable, however, and that's where the trouble can start. If instead of an integer, x
points to a list (lists are mutable), then things are different.
x = [1, 2, 3]
y = x
y.append(5)
print(x)
[1, 2, 3, 5]
What happened? We created a list [1, 2, 3]
and pointed the name x
at it. Then we pointed the name y
at the same list. When we add a value to the list, there is only the one list, so the changes to it are reflected whether we ask for it by its first name, x
, or its second name, y
.
A reasonable question. When you call a function and send it a few names (inputs), that action doesn't create copies of the objects that those names point to. It just creates a new name that points at the same data.
Let's create a simple function that adds a value to a list and then returns a "copy" of that list.
def add_to_list(mylist):
mylist.append(7)
newlist = mylist.copy()
return newlist
mylist = [1, 2, 3]
newlist = add_to_list(mylist)
We send in mylist
, make a change to it, then make a copy of it and return the copy. But we didn't return mylist
so those changes are discarded, right?
print(newlist)
[1, 2, 3, 7]
print(mylist)
[1, 2, 3, 7]
Wrong. We sent in the name mylist
and then appended a value to it. At that point, the list has been changed. We used the copy()
command to create newlist
, so it points to a different list than mylist
, but mylist
has still been altered by the function.
Is this because the function expects a list named mylist
and that is what we sent? Alas, no.
T = [2, 4, 2]
newlist = add_to_list(T)
print(T)
[2, 4, 2, 7]
When we send the name T
to the function add_to_list
, the function creates the new name mylist
and points it to the same list that T
points to.
The most important thing is to be aware of this behavior. It's a feature of the language and it doesn't often cause problems, but you need to know about it for when it does cause problems.
from IPython.core.display import HTML
css_file = '../../styles/numericalmoocstyle.css'
HTML(open(css_file, "r").read())