functools.partial wants to use a positional argument as a keyword argument

后端 未结 3 1568
情话喂你
情话喂你 2020-11-30 07:28

So I am trying to understand partial:

import functools

def f(x,y) :
    print x+y

g0 = functools.partial( f, 3 )
g0(1)

4 # Works as expected
         


        
相关标签:
3条回答
  • 2020-11-30 08:03

    This has nothing to do with functools.partial, really. You are essentially calling your function like this:

    f(1, x=3)
    

    Python first fulfils the positional arguments, and your first argument is x. Then the keyword arguments are applied, and you again supplied x.

    functools.partial() has no means to detect that you already supplied the first positional argument as a keyword argument instead. It will not augment your call by replacing the positional argument with a y= keyword argument.

    When mixing positional and keyword arguments, you must take care not to use the same argument twice.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-30 08:03

    To expand on @Martijn-Pieters answer, this is how you can preserve the positional nature of the second parameter. Here, the argument to g2 is passed positionally as y:

    def f(x,y) :
        print x+y
    
    g2 = functools.partial( f, *[3] )
    g2(1)
    

    That works when we're trying to replace an initial set of the arguments of f. I don't know how to use partial to replace e.g. just the second argument of a 3-parameter function, and allow the first and third to be passed positionally. But you could do that with a lambda expression.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-30 08:07

    Not an answer, a follow up question (since I can't add a comment without 50 reputation), could you please elaborate or use simple terms as the answers here are above my comprehension. I have a similar issue using a button in Maya

    import maya.cmds as cmds
    from functools import partial
    
    class Myclass(object):
        def __init__(self):
            pass
        def createui(self):
            derp = cmds.window()
            cmds.formLayout()
            cmds.button(label = "w/e", c = partial(self.f, x = 3))
            cmds.showWindow(derp)
        def f(self, x = 5, y = 3, *_):
            print(x+y)
    
    herp = Myclass()
    herp.createui()
    

    clicking on the button will give that same error "got multiple values for keyword argument 'x'"

    even though what I thought was being sent as arguments was a call to the class, some stupid call to the UI element itself (usually a value of False) which should be put in the *_ catch all argument, and then keyword argument of x.

    0 讨论(0)
提交回复
热议问题