Ok, just looking for a sanity check here, or maybe something I'm missing. I have a class Test, for example:
class Test: def __init__(self, param1, param2, param3): self.param1 = param1 self.param2 = param2 self.param3 = param3 Next, I have a dictionary mytest that contains instances of Test. If I want to modify one of the Test instances within my dictionary, I have to rewrite the entire entry, correct (since Python passes by value, not reference)? I.e. if I wish to change just param3 of an instance, I would have to do: def changevalue(): for key in mytest.keys(): currentparam = mytest[key] param1 = currentparam.param1 param2 = currentparam.param2 param3 = currentparam.param3 param3 = "newvalue" mytest[key] = Test(param1, param2, param3) If there's an easier way to accomplish this that I'm missing, that'd be great! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list