On 11 Feb 2019, at 20:00, Felix Lazaro Carbonell <fe...@epepm.cupet.cu> wrote:

>> The most pythonic way is to do this:
>> 
>> def find_monthly_expenses(month=datetime.date.today().month,
> year=datetime.date.today().year):
>>    ...

This has subtle bugs. 
The default is calculated at import time and not at function call time.
Also the defaults for month and year are not calculated at the same moment in 
time.

Import at 23:59:59.99 on 31 december 2018 and you might get
month as 12 and year as 2019.

Run this example to see the problem:

import datetime
import time

def test_defaults(prefix, now=datetime.datetime.now()):
    print( prefix, now )

test_defaults('one')
time.sleep( 1 )
test_defaults('two')
time.sleep( 1 )
test_defaults('three', datetime.datetime.now())

Which outputs:

one 2019-02-16 08:30:54.819466
two 2019-02-16 08:30:54.819466
three 2019-02-16 08:30:56.821453

Notice that the time for 'one' and 'two' is the same.
Only the overridden default chanse.

Barry

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