Ray.Allen <[email protected]> added the comment:
Here is the explanation from Python Language Reference 7.6: Function Definitions
"""
When one or more top-level parameters have the form parameter = expression, the
function is said to have ``default 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 a default value -- this is a
syntactic restriction that is not expressed by the grammar.
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
None as the default, and explicitly test for it in the body of the function,
e.g.:
def whats_on_the_telly(penguin=None):
if penguin is None:
penguin = []
penguin.append("property of the zoo")
return penguin
"""
----------
nosy: +ysj.ray
_______________________________________
Python tracker <[email protected]>
<http://bugs.python.org/issue8762>
_______________________________________
_______________________________________________
Python-bugs-list mailing list
Unsubscribe:
http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-bugs-list/archive%40mail-archive.com