On Fri, 22 Sep 2017 05:01 pm, Bill wrote: > Steve D'Aprano wrote: >> On Fri, 22 Sep 2017 02:57 pm, Bill wrote: >> >>> I find Python to be more more >>> like Java, with regard to "passing objects by reference". >> Which is not a surprise, since both Python and Java use the same value >> passing style: pass by object reference, or pass by sharing if you prefer. >> >> Java people don't call it that. They call it pass by value, and categorically >> deny that it is pass by reference. (They're right about the second point.) > > I figure that, internally, an address, a pointer, is being passed by > value to implement pass by reference. Why do you say "they are right" > above? Are you saying it's not pass by reference?
Are you suggested that the Java people are wrong to say it isn't? Last time I suggested that the Java community had made a mistake in this regard, I got blasted by certain folks here for insulting the intelligence of compiler experts. But yes, I agree with the Java community that what they do is NOT pass by reference. It clearly is not: the canonical test for pass by reference is whether you can write a "swap" procedure which swaps two variables: a = 1 b = 2 swap(a, b) assert a == 2 and b == 1 A general swap procedure cannot be written in Python or Java. (We don't need one, in Python, because we have alternatives which are arguably better, but that's not the point.) So I am in 100% agreement with the Java people when they say what they do (and what Python does) is not pass by reference. > What really screws the terminology up is that it's not parameters that > are being passed, it's arguments! %-) I don't believe that I mentioned parameters or arguments, so that's a red herring. The terminology is fine, if we don't insist on ignoring it. There are many more kinds of passing semantics than just by value and by reference, and the confusion only occurs when people insist on taking the round peg of a language's actual behaviour, and hammering it in by brute-force into the square hole of "pass by value" or "pass by reference". Quoting Wikipedia: In some cases, the term "call by value" is problematic, as the value which is passed is not the value of the variable as understood by the ordinary meaning of value, but an implementation-specific reference to the value. Some examples: - call by sharing - call by need - call by name - call by copy-restore ("copy in, copy out") etc. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evaluation_strategy -- Steve “Cheer up,” they said, “things could be worse.” So I cheered up, and sure enough, things got worse. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list