On 15/06/21 3:18 pm, Jach Feng wrote:
From a user's point, I don't really care how Python creates thoseinstances, > either using an already exist one or create a new one, as long as each element (and its sub-element) are independent from each other so a modification of one will not influence the other. The real problem is there are different methods can be used to build it and some will fail in this purpose. The * operator is one of them, but anyone else? I really like to know:-)
This really has nothing to do with how the tuples are created. It all depends on what you choose to put in them. When you use square brackets to build a list, you can be sure that it will create a new list object each time. Also, if you create two tuples, by any means, containing distinct elements, you can be sure that you will get two distinct tuple objects. So, if you do this: a = [1, 2] b = [1, 2] c = [1, 2] d = [1, 2] s = (a, b) t = (c, d) then you are guaranteed to get four different list objects and two diffferent tuple objects. Does that help to ease your fears? -- Greg -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list