To test this out a wrote a little script as an exercise:

for num in range(1, 10):
        x = 'c' * num
        y = 'c' * num
        
        if x is y:
           print 'x and y are the same object with', num, 'characters'
        else:
           print 'x and y are not the same object at', num, 'characters'
           break

But a few questions arise:

1. As it is above, I get the 'not the same object' message at 2 
characters. But doesn't Python only create one instance of small strings 
and use them in multiple references? Why would a two character string 
not pass the if test?

2. If I say x = y = 'c' * num instead of the above, the if test always 
returns true. Does that mean that when you do a compound assignment like 
that, it's not just setting each variable to the same value, but setting 
them to each other?

Finally, I'd like to see how others might write a script to do this 
exercise. Basically I just wanted to see when two names stop referring 
to the same string, which I figured was based on length of the string. 
But I've also noticed that putting spaces in the string also affects 
things, so maybe there isn't just one way to test this.
-- 
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Reply via email to