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Kirill Smelkov
cpython
Commits
e039439e
Commit
e039439e
authored
Dec 04, 1998
by
Guido van Rossum
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Clarify evaluation of default arguments at def time with more text and
an example.
parent
c6e22902
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Doc/ref/ref7.tex
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e039439e
...
...
@@ -304,8 +304,7 @@ executed only when the function is called.
When one or more top-level parameters have the form
\var
{
parameter
}
\code
{
=
}
\var
{
expression
}
, the function is said to have ``default
parameter values.''
\strong
{
Default parameter values are evaluated
when the function definition is executed.
}
For a parameter with a
parameter values.'' For a parameter with a
default value, the corresponding argument may be omitted from a call,
in which case the parameter's default value is substituted. If a
parameter has a default value, all following parameters must also have
...
...
@@ -315,6 +314,25 @@ expressed by the grammar.%
\code
{
def f(a=1, b)
}
is interpreted as
\code
{
def f(a=1, b=None)
}
.
}
\indexiii
{
default
}{
parameter
}{
value
}
\strong
{
Default parameter values are evaluated when the function
definition is executed.
}
This means that the expression is evaluated
once, when the function is defined, and that that same
``pre-computed'' value is used for each call. This is especially
important to understand when a default parameter is a mutable object,
such as a list or a dictionary: if the function modifies the object
(e.g. by appending an item to a list), the default value is in effect
modified. This is generally not what was intended. A way around this
is to use
\code
{
None
}
as the default, and explicitly test for it in
the body of the function, e.g.:
\begin{verbatim}
def whats
_
on
_
the
_
telly(penguin=None):
if penguin is None:
penguin = []
penguin.append("property of the zoo")
return penguin
\end{verbatim}
Function call semantics are described in more detail in section
\ref
{
calls
}
.
A function call always assigns values to all parameters mentioned in
...
...
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