I'm trying to create a function that can take arguments, say, foo and bar, and modify the original copies of foo and bar as well as its local versions -- the equivalent of C++ funct(&foo, &bar).
I've looked around on this newsgroup and elsewhere, and I gather that this is a very common concern in Python, but one which is ordinarily answered with "No, you can't. Neat, huh?" A few websites, newsgroup posts, etc. have recommended that one ask for a more "Pythonic" way of doing things; so, is there one, or at least one that doesn't involve using objects as wrappers for mutable arguments? And, indeed, would that approach work? Would declaring: class FooWrapper : __init__(fooToLoad) : self.foo = fooToLoad mean that I could now declare a FooWrapper holding a foo, pass the FooWrapper to a function, and have the function conclude with the foo within the FooWrapper now modified? Thanks in advance for everyone's time; I hope I'm comprehensible. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list