"Steven D'Aprano" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Fri, 8 May 2015 08:53 pm, Frank Millman wrote:
>
>>> Does z have to be a list? Could you use an empty tuple instead?
>>>
>>> def x(y, z=()): ...
>>>
>>
>> That was Chris' suggestion as well (thanks Chris).
>>
>> The idea appealed to me, but then I found a situation where I pass in a
>> dictionary instead of a list, so that would not work.
>
>
> Why wouldn't it work? If it worked with an empty list, it will probably
> work
> with an empty tuple instead.
>
Sorry, I should have been more explicit. In the case of a dictionary, I used
'def x(y, z={}'
I have not checked, but I assume that as dictionaries are mutable, this
suffers from the same drawback as a default list.
Unlike a list, it cannot be replaced by an empty tuple without changing the
body of the function.
Dave's suggestion would have worked here -
EMPTY_LIST = []
EMPTY_DICT = {}
But as I have decided to use the None trick, I use it for a default
dictionary as well.
Frank
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