On 26/08/2013 10:54, chandan kumar wrote:
Hi all,
Please see the below code,in which i'm verifying the global value in python.
CHK=10
def test1():
print "Value of CHK in test1",CHK
def test2():
CHK=40
print "Value of CHK in test2",CHK
test1()
def test3():
global CHK
test2()
test3()
When i ran above code ,I'm getting vlaue of CHK as 40 in test2 method and 10 in
test1 method
Can somone explain me why the value of CHK is different in method test1 and
test2.
In a function, if you bind to a name then Python assumes that the name
is local to that function unless you declare that it's global.
In test1, you refer to 'CHK' but don't bind to it, therefore it's
global.
In test2, you bind to 'CHK' with 'CHK=40', and you haven't declared
that it's global, therefore it's local to test2.
In test3, you declare that 'CHK' is global, but don't mention it
anywhere else in that function, so it serves no purpose.
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