import copy
a = \"deepak\"
b = 1, 2, 3, 4
c = [1, 2, 3, 4]
d = {1: 10, 2: 20, 3: 30}
a1 = copy.copy(a)
b1 = copy.copy(b)
c1 = copy.copy(c)
d1 = copy.copy(d)
prin
Normal assignment operations will simply point the new variable towards the existing object. The docs explain the difference between shallow and deep copies:
The difference between shallow and deep copying is only relevant for compound objects (objects that contain other objects, like lists or class instances):
A shallow copy constructs a new compound object and then (to the extent possible) inserts references into it to the objects found in the original.
A deep copy constructs a new compound object and then, recursively, inserts copies into it of the objects found in the original.
Here's a little demonstration:
import copy
a = [1, 2, 3]
b = [4, 5, 6]
c = [a, b]
Using normal assignment operatings to copy:
d = c
print id(c) == id(d) # True - d is the same object as c
print id(c[0]) == id(d[0]) # True - d[0] is the same object as c[0]
Using a shallow copy:
d = copy.copy(c)
print id(c) == id(d) # False - d is now a new object
print id(c[0]) == id(d[0]) # True - d[0] is the same object as c[0]
Using a deep copy:
d = copy.deepcopy(c)
print id(c) == id(d) # False - d is now a new object
print id(c[0]) == id(d[0]) # False - d[0] is now a new object