On 17/06/2018 03:28, Grant Edwards wrote:
On 2018-06-16, ip.b...@gmail.com <ip.b...@gmail.com> wrote:
I'm intrigued by the output of the following code, which was totally
contrary to my expectations. Can someone tell me what is happening?
myName = "Kevin"
id(myName)
47406848
id(myName[0])
36308576
id(myName[1])
2476000
What's happening is that you're paying attention to the values
returned by id(), when you should not. The fact that CPython returns
a VM address when you call id() is just an "accident" of that
particular implimentation. You shouldn't assume that id() returns
anything other than a number that is unique to each object. Any time
you spend worrying about how that number is calculated is proably
wasted.
I expected myName[0] to be located at the same memory location as the myName
variable itself.
Python is not C.
I also expected myName[1] to be located immediately after myName[0].
Python is not C.
Just in case you missed that...
Python is not C.
So, how /do/ you obtain the memory address of those values are located?
For example, in order to pass it to some foreign C function that takes a
void* parameter.
I assume there is a memory address at least for the "Kevin" value, as
the other two might yield temporary objects for "K" and "e" rather the
in-place strings which are the first and second characters of the name.
--
bart
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