de...@web.de writes: > Objects can be mutable or immutable. For example, in Python, integers, > strings, floats and tuples are immutable. That means that you can't > change their value.
Yes. Importantly, wherever you see code that you *think* is changing the value of an immutable object, you're thinking incorrectly. (There's no shame in that; other languages give us preconceptions that can be hard to shake off.) The only way to get a different value from an integer object is to ask Python for a different integer object; the original is unchanged. The same goes for tuples, strings, and all the other immutable types. > Mutable objects OTOH can be changed. […] Some good articles to explain Python's object model: <URL:http://effbot.org/zone/python-objects.htm> <URL:http://docs.python.org/reference/datamodel.html#objects-values-and-types> -- \ “We can't depend for the long run on distinguishing one | `\ bitstream from another in order to figure out which rules | _o__) apply.” —Eben Moglen, _Anarchism Triumphant_, 1999 | Ben Finney -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list