On 23/07/2015 12:24, candide wrote: [...]
Now, global declaration has another restriction, as PLR explains: [https://docs.python.org/3.4/reference/simple_stmts.html#the-global-statement] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Names listed in a global statement must not be defined as formal parameters or in a for loop control target, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ What I understand is that the following is a must-not-code: # --------------------------------------- def f(): global i for i in range(1,3): print(10*i) f() print(i) # --------------------------------------- But, the later code executes silently without any warning: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 10 20 2 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ So my question is: what is the restriction about global as loop control variable the docs is referring to?
I think for situations like this one? # --------------------------------------- def f(): global temperature for temperature in range(1,3): print "In f temperature is:", temperature temperature = 500 print "temperature is now", temperature f() print"temperature is now:", temperature # temperature is now "broken" if temperature <= 100: print "Launching rocket" else: # this never happens print "temperature too high! Aborting launch." # --------------------------------------- -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list