RgeeK wrote:
I'm seeing something which make me think I'm missing something about
how global var's behave. I've defined a global string, right at the
start of my .py file.
outXMLfile = "abc"
I define a class and do a bunch of stuff below that. Then I have
another class, and in it, there is a method 'def' that has:
def OnOutfileButton(self,evt):
(fPath, fName)=os.path.split(fullName)
print "Selected output file: " + fName
outXMLfile = fName
print "output file: " + outXMLfile
Print statements in random other places in the project, show outXMLfile
prints as "abc" however, in this def, it comes out as the same as fName
(e.g. "myfile.xml") If the print line for outXMLfile is before the
assignment to fName, it throws the error:
UnboundLocalError: local variable 'outXMLfile' referenced before
assignment
If I remove the line that says "outXMLfile = fName"
then the print statement gives me the value "abc"
What am I missing? When I assign a value to update my global variable,
it becomes a local variable. If I don't try to update it, it stays
global. I assume it's acting like a constant, though I have a couple of
global lists and I seem to be able to append to them okay.
http://docs.python.org/ref/naming.html
"If a name binding operation occurs anywhere within a code block, all
uses of the name within the block are treated as references to the
current block. This can lead to errors when a name is used within a
block before it is bound."
to fix this, use the global directive:
http://docs.python.org/ref/global.html
def OnOutfileButton(self,evt):
global outXMLfile # flag variable as global
fPath, fName = os.path.split(fullName)
print "Selected output file:", fName
outXMLfile = fName
...
</F>
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