On 27 Sep, 15:34, "Diez B. Roggisch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > Why are the following different? > > > def AddRow(self, rowName, tableRow=TableRow(ReleaseDate(""), > > ExpiryDate(""))): > > # check to see if the row already exists, if not add it to the > > container > > > if not self.dict.has_key(rowName): > > self.dict[rowName] = tableRow > > > def AddRow(self, rowName, tableRow): > > # check to see if the row already exists, if not add it to the > > container > > > if not self.dict.has_key(rowName): > > self.dict[rowName] = TableRow(ReleaseDate(""), ExpiryDate("")) > > > It seems that when I use the first function that I'm getting duplicate > > objects in self.dict > > > Thanks for your help, > > It's a FAQ. > > http://effbot.org/pyfaq/why-are-default-values-shared-between-objects... > > Diez- Dölj citerad text - > > - Visa citerad text -
Cool, I understand now. It was my understanding of how Python works that was at fault.
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