On Tue, May 6, 2014 at 7:11 PM, Marko Rauhamaa <ma...@pacujo.net> wrote: > Steven D'Aprano <st...@pearwood.info>: > >> On Mon, 05 May 2014 17:39:44 -0700, Satish Muthali wrote: >>> I have a burning question on how to pass variable by reference in >>> Python. I understand that the data type has to be mutable. >> >> [...] >> >> To get an effect *similar* to pass-by-reference, you can wrap your >> variable in a list, and then only operate on the list item. > > Consider also returning multiple values in a tuple. > > In C: > > stats_read(stats, &characters, &words, &lines); > > In Python: > > characters, words, lines = stats.read()
That's not really pass-by-reference, though. What you're doing is output parameters, which are usually implemented in C with pointers, but in Python with a return tuple. Pass-by-reference allows the callee to see and modify something in the caller's environment; for instance, the stats_read() C function might maintain stats in the three pointed-to integers, eg incrementing them for each char/word/line processed. The Python equivalent would need to pass them as parameters AND return them. For that sort of case, you'd probably want to pass an object with three attributes (or maybe a dict or a list), which would then be modified; that's a much closer approximation of pass-by-reference. Hence Steven's statement about wrapping it in a list. And, by the way, it's not purely academic. There have been times when I've done exactly that as a means of passing state around. It's not common, but it has its place. ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list