On Friday, August 3, 2012 10:50:52 PM UTC+5:30, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote: > On Fri, 3 Aug 2012 04:49:46 -0700 (PDT), Subhabrata > > <subhabangal...@gmail.com> declaimed the following in > > gmane.comp.python.general: > > > > > Dear Group, > > > > > > I am trying to call the values of one function in the another function in > > the following way: > > > > Technically, "the values of one function" are whatever it RETURNS; > > > > > def func1(): > > > num1=10 > > > num2=20 > > > print "The Second Number is:",num2 > > > return > > > > > This function returns None. > > > > Recommended software design practices are that any thing inside the > > function should be local to just that function -- a function should be a > > black box -- you call it with some data, and you obtain some results > > when it returns; what it does internally should be "invisible" and have > > no effect on any other code. > > > > Read: > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coupling_%28computer_programming%29 > > (what you are attempting falls into "content coupling" if you change the > > use of "module" to "function") > > > > However, Python lets you declare names to be global (to the > > module/file). This is primarily meant to be used when a function must > > rebind a module level entity. (This would be "common coupling") > > > > def func1(): > > global num1, num2 > > ... > > > > But, as mentioned, that now makes num1 and num2 names that are known > > outside the functions. > > > > > def func2(): > > > num3=num1+num2 > > > num4=num3+num1 > > > print "New Number One is:",num3 > > > print "New Number Two is:",num4 > > > return > > > > > Misleading print statements, as you are NOT changing "number one" or > > "number two"; you've just created two NEW names (num3, num4). > > > > > I am preferring not to use argument passing or using class? Is there any > > alternate way? > > > > > > > Well, if you end func1 with > > > > return num1, num2 > > > > you can change func2 into: > > > > def func2(): > > n1, n2 = func1() > > num3 = n1 + n2 > > num4 = num3 + n1 > > ... > > -- > > Wulfraed Dennis Lee Bieber AF6VN > > wlfr...@ix.netcom.com HTTP://wlfraed.home.netcom.com/
Dear Group, Absolutely brilliant, Ramit. Dennis also came with almost same answer. Using global may not give clean results everytime. I wanted to say, >>> def func1(): num1=10 num2=20 print "The Second Number is:",num2 >>> def func2(): func1() num3=50 print "The New Number is:",num3 >>> func2() The Second Number is: 20 The New Number is: 50 The post went slightly wrong sorry. No, I experiment myself on idle evenings to experiment with coding etc so I think of problems, practice on them and try to see if any better code evolves. Nothing else. I posted and Steve did not comment perhaps never happens. He rebukes me so much from my early days here, I just enjoy it. Regards and best wishes, Subhabrata. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list