On Sun, 27 Jul 2008 16:41:19 +0200, "Diez B. Roggisch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>You obviously aren't aware of the pitfalls regarding the mis-use of or >and and for this usage. <snip example> Well, yes, I am (and the way around the problem), but as its never caught me out (so far), I hadn't considered it. >Can you tell us what you mean by "several names of one object"? You mean >this? > >a = range(10) >b = a > >id(a) == id(b) > > >? Passing references instead of values is an extremely important concept >of many languages, without it you would end up copying most of the time. OK. I've obviously been thinking about things the wrong way. In Forth you pass the memory address around, and presumably that's essentially what's happening when you pass a reference. The problem is, I get caught frequently in this situation: a = [1,2,3] def foo(x): do_something_with_x return x ... Then when I call foo(a), a gets changed. It just isn't the effect I expect from changing a local. DaveM -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list