To start with, I'm new at Python, so if this is something relatively ordinary or a symptom of thinking in C++, I apologize...
Anyhow, I'm currently trying to write a means of generating genetic-programming functions in Python; the details would be a little much for a Usenet post, but suffice it to say that it would involve trees of objects with an opcode and a variable number, between in this case 0 and 3, of 'arguments' -- also objects of the same sort. As a function to implement them, I'm doing something to the effect of this: max_opcode = ( 20, ) max_with_arguments = ( 15, ) class TreeCommand: opcode = 0 children = [] def __init__(self, anOpcode) : opcode = anOpcode def MakeTreeCommand( maxdepth, currdepth ) : if ( currdepth == 0 ) : toRet = TreeCommand(random.randint(0, max_with_arguments[0]) elif ( maxdepth == currdepth ) : toRet = TreeCommand(random.randint(max_with_arguments[0]+1, max_opcode[0])) else : toRet = TreeCommand(random.randint(0, max_opcode[0])) if ( toRet.opcode <= max_with_arguments[0] ) : childrenRequired = something_greater_than_0 else : childrenRequired = 0 generated = 0 while ( generated < childrenRequired ) : toRet.children.append(MakeTreeCommand(maxdepth, currdepth + 1)) return toRet Sorry to have given such a long example... But anyways, the problem is that, while I think this should generate a number of children for each toRet equivalent to the required number of children, it's actually appending all children generated in the function to the 'root' toRet rather than to child functions -- so that if I ask for a tree with depth 2, and the root would have 2 arguments, the first child would have 1, and the second child would have 2, the result is a root with a 5-argument-long children and two child functions with 0-argument ones. There's some other strange stuff going on here, too; in particular, with one particular opcode, toRet is assigned a member 'value' which is randomly generated between 0 and 10,000. All toRets assigned value seem to be ending up with the same result... Could anyone explain what I'm doing wrong? I'm beginning to suspect that Python scope rules must not work like my native C++; have I made a common mistake? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list