Joel Davis <callmeclaud...@gmail.com> wrote: > >Emile, essentially, the situation is that I'm trying to create an API >for consumption scripting. As it stands now, in initial development >they can pass callback function. The idea was to enable them to pass >variables and have the handling function determine the type and just >drop the value into it instead of calling function with the value as >an argument. The problem with that approach is determining exactly >which variable was passed. My idea was to use this to capture the name >and then modify the globals for the executing frame so that the passed >variable represents the new value.
You're making some rather dangerous and unwarranted assumptions here. Consider your original code: def MyFunc ( varPassed ): print varPassed; MyFunc(nwVar) What's going to happen if I do this: MyFunc( nwVar+1 ) MyFunc( 27 ) MyFunc( "abcde" ) If the thing passed in is a list or an object, you can modify the object in place without trickery. You can check that with the "type" operator: if type(varPassed) == list: pass -- Tim Roberts, t...@probo.com Providenza & Boekelheide, Inc. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list