It seems to me that functions can reference variables outside of their scope but cannot set them. Is this correct? Am I understanding this right?
I also included the globals usage. I know they are bad ju-ju and will avoid them; I know how to get around t开发者_运维技巧his, but just wanted to be clear.
My example program:
import foo
# beginning of functions
# this one works because I look at the variable but dont modify it
def do_something_working:
if flag_to_do_something:
print "I did it"
# this one does not work because I modify the var
def do_something_not_working:
if flag_to_do_something:
print "I did it"
flag_to_do_something = 0
# this one works, but if I do this God kills a kitten
def do_something_using_globals_working_bad_ju_ju:
global flag_to_do_something
if flag_to_do_something:
print "I did it"
flag_to_do_something = 0
# end of functions
flag_to_do_something = 1
do_something_working()
do_something_not_working()
do_something_using_globals_working_bad_ju_ju()
Correct. Well mostly. When you flag_to_do_something = 0
you are not modifying the variable, you are creating a new variable. The flag_to_do_something
that is created in the function will be a separate link to (in this case) the same object. However, if you had used a function or operator that modified the variable in place, then the code would have worked.
Example:
g = [1,2,3]
def a():
g = [1,2]
a()
print g #outputs [1,2,3]
g = [1,2,3]
def b():
g.remove(3)
b()
print g #outputs [1,2]
Yep, pretty much. Note that "global" variables in Python are actually module-level variables - their scope is that Python module (a.k.a. source file), not the entire program, as would be the case with a true global variable. So Python globals aren't quite as bad as globals in, say, C. But it's still preferable to avoid them.
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