On Sat, Apr 3, 2010 at 3:30 AM, Alain Ketterlin <al...@dpt-info.u-strasbg.fr> wrote: > I've just spent a few hours debugging code similar to this: > > d = dict() > for r in [1,2,3]: > d[r] = [r for r in [4,5,6]] > print d > > THe problem is that the "r" in d[r] somehow captures the value of the > "r" in the list comprehension, and somehow kills the loop interator. The > (unexpected) result is {6: [4, 5, 6]}. Changing r to s inside the list > leads to the correct (imo) result. > > Is this expected? Is this a known problem? Is it solved in newer > versions?
Quoting http://docs.python.org/reference/expressions.html#id19 : Footnotes [1] In Python 2.3 and later releases, a list comprehension “leaks” the control variables of each 'for' it contains into the containing scope. However, this behavior is deprecated, and relying on it will not work in Python 3.0 Cheers, Chris -- http://blog.rebertia.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list