I tried the following in the python interpreter:
>>> a = []
>>> b = {1:'one'}
>>> a.append(开发者_如何转开发b)
>>> a
[{1: 'one'}]
>>> b[1] = 'ONE'
>>> a
[{1: 'ONE'}]
Here, after appending the dictionary b
to the list a
, I'm changing the value corresponding to the key 1
in dictionary b
. Somehow this change gets reflected in the list too. When I append a dictionary to a list, am I not just appending the value of dictionary? It looks as if I have appended a pointer to the dictionary to the list and hence the changes to the dictionary are getting reflected in the list too.
I do not want the change to get reflected in the list. How do I do it?
You are correct in that your list contains a reference to the original dictionary.
a.append(b.copy())
should do the trick.
Bear in mind that this makes a shallow copy. An alternative is to use copy.deepcopy(b)
, which makes a deep copy.
Also with dict
a = []
b = {1:'one'}
a.append(dict(b))
print a
b[1]='iuqsdgf'
print a
result
[{1: 'one'}]
[{1: 'one'}]
use copy and deep copy
http://docs.python.org/library/copy.html
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