Python optional parameters

六眼飞鱼酱① 提交于 2019-11-30 06:01:27

You need to understand how default values work in order to use them effectively.

Functions are objects. As such, they have attributes. So, if I create this function:

>>> def f(x, y=[]):
        y.append(x)
        return y

I've created an object. Here are its attributes:

>>> dir(f)
['__call__', '__class__', '__closure__', '__code__', '__defaults__', '__delattr__',   
'__dict__', '__doc__', '__format__', '__get__', '__getattribute__', '__globals__',    
'__hash__', '__init__', '__module__', '__name__', '__new__', '__reduce__', 
'__reduce_ex__', '__repr__', '__setattr__', '__sizeof__', '__str__', '__subclasshook__', 
'func_closure', 'func_code', 'func_defaults', 'func_dict', 'func_doc', 'func_globals', 
'func_name']

One of them is func_defaults. That sounds promising, what's in there?

>>> f.func_defaults
([],)

That's a tuple that contains the function's default values. If a default value is an object, the tuple contains an instance of that object.

This leads to some fairly counterintuitive behavior if you're thinking that f adds an item to a list, returning a list containing only that item if no list is provided:

>>> f(1)
[1]
>>> f(2)
[1, 2]

But if you know that the default value is an object instance that's stored in one of the function's attributes, it's much less counterintuitive:

>>> x = f(3)
>>> y = f(4)
>>> x == y
True
>>> x
[1, 2, 3, 4]
>>> x.append(5)
>>> f(6)
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]

Knowing this, it's clear that if you want a default value of a function's parameter to be a new list (or any new object), you can't simply stash an instance of the object in func_defaults. You have to create a new one every time the function is called:

>>>def g(x, y=None):
       if y==None:
           y = []
       y.append(x)
       return y
SilentGhost

you need to do the following:

class A:
    def __init__(self, builds=None):
        if builds is None:
            builds = B()
        self.builds = builds

it's a very wide-spread error, using mutable parameters as a default arguments. there are plenty of dupes probably on SO.

Yes; default parameters are evaluated only at the time when the function is defined.

One possible solution would be to have the parameter be a class rather than an instance, a la

def foo(blah, klass = B):
    b = klass()
    # etc
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