On Sat, Jul 19, 2014 at 9:40 PM, Jerry lu <nicholascann...@gmail.com> wrote: > oh yeah i forgot about the decorators. Um say that you wanted to decorate a > function with the outer() func you would just put @outer on top of it? And > this is the same as passing another func into the outer func? > > and also with the first example you say x is in the scope when is was created > can you define x in the outer func and refer to it in the inner func?
Firstly, please don't use Google Groups, or if you must, please clean up its messes. It's conventional on mailing lists and newsgroups to quote a bit of text to give context; so, for instance, you mention one of my examples, without quoting it. Secondly: Don't worry about decorators. You almost never need them, and they're very simple. (Python avoids magic whenever it can!) These two are equivalent: def inner(): pass inner = outer(inner) @outer def inner(): pass That's all the decorator does. It's that simple. As to scoping... read up on closures. There's a lot that I could say, but you'll find some excellent articles on the internet about it. Also, you'll learn how to find information, which is a skill you are going to need in this life :) ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list