Rami Chowdhury wrote:
> Hi Nitin,
>
> On Sat, Nov 28, 2009 at 14:36, MRAB <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Nitin Changlani. wrote:
>>> three.py
>>> ------------
>>> import one
>>> import two
>>>
>>> def argFunc():
>>> one.x = 'place_no_x'
>>> one.a = 'place_no_a'
>>> one.b = 'place_no_b'
>>>
>
> I think this is what is biting you. You might expect that after
> argFunc, one.x would be set to 'place_no_x' and so on. However,
> Python's scoping doesn't work like that -- the name one.x is only
> rebound in the function's scope, so outside of argFunc (e.g. in your
> main printing code) one.x is still bound to 'place_x'.
No, It's not like that. MRAB had it. The thing is, that when one.py is
imported, it sets the name one.a to refer to a string 'place_a'. Then a
list named one.myList is built with one.myList[0] referring to the same
string as one.a . So far, so good.
Then the function argFunc is called. It uses `one` as a name from its
global namespace. Inside argFunc, the names one.x and one.a are rebound to
different strings from the ones they started with. *But* one.myList[0]
isn't touched, and still refers to 'place_x' like it always did.
Mel.
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