[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > I am a python newbie, and am grappling with a fundamental concept. I > want to > modify a bunch of variables in place. Consider the following: > [snip] >>>>a = 'one' >>>>b = 'two' >>>>c = 'three' >>>>[a, b, c] = [s.upper() for s in [a, b, c]] > > Both of these accomplish what I'm after; I prefer the second for its > brevity. > But either approach requires that I spell out my list of vars-to-alter > [a, b, c] twice. This strikes me as awkward, and would be difficult > with longer lists. Any suggestions for a better way to do this?
While the real question is why you think you need to modify a bunch of variables in place**, here's one solution to the immediate problem: for name in 'a b c'.split(): globals()[name] = globals()[name].upper() That, of course, will work only if they really are globals, and not if they are local variables inside a function. If that's the case, you really want to rethink this anyway (or use Raymond's approach, though it still appears to require spelling out your list of names twice). ** Why you might not want to do this at all: It's very rare in real code to need to work with a large number of variables as a set like that. More generally you should probably be storing the strings in something like a list and manipulating them there. This would look like this: shtuff = ['a', 'b', 'c'] for i,item in enumerate(shtuff): shtuff[i] = item.upper() Or, even more likely: newList = [] for item in shtuff: newList.append(item.upper()) shtuff = newList If you think you really need to do this anyway, consider posting an example of real code from the program you are trying to write, explaining the actual use case, and we can analyze the real situation instead of debating contrived examples. -Peter -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list