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< p align = " center " > < img src = " /images/logo.png " alt = " " > < / p >
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< h1 align = " center " > What the f * ck Python ! 😱 < / h1 >
< p align = " center " > Exploring and understanding Python through surprising snippets . < / p >
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Translations : [ Chinese 中文 ] ( https : / / github . com / leisurelicht / wtfpython - cn ) | [ Vietnamese Tiếng Việt ] ( https : / / github . com / vuduclyunitn / wtfptyhon - vi ) | [ Spanish Español ] ( https : / / github . com / JoseDeFreitas / wtfpython - es ) | [ Add translation ] ( https : / / github . com / satwikkansal / wtfpython / issues / new ? title = Add % 20 translation % 20 for % 20 [ LANGUAGE ] & body = Expected % 20 time % 20 to % 20 finish : % 20 [ X ] % 20 weeks . % 20 I % 27 ll % 20 start % 20 working % 20 on % 20 it % 20 from % 20 [ Y ] . )
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Other modes : [ Interactive ] ( https : / / colab . research . google . com / github / satwikkansal / wtfpython / blob / master / irrelevant / wtf . ipynb ) | [ CLI ] ( https : / / pypi . python . org / pypi / wtfpython )
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Python , being a beautifully designed high - level and interpreter - based programming language , provides us with many features for the programmer ' s comfort. But sometimes, the outcomes of a Python snippet may not seem obvious at first sight.
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Here ' s a fun project attempting to explain what exactly is happening under the hood for some counter-intuitive snippets and lesser-known features in Python.
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While some of the examples you see below may not be WTFs in the truest sense , but they ' ll reveal some of the interesting parts of Python that you might be unaware of. I find it a nice way to learn the internals of a programming language, and I believe that you ' ll find it interesting too !
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If you ' re an experienced Python programmer, you can take it as a challenge to get most of them right in the first attempt. You may have already experienced some of them before, and I might be able to revive sweet old memories of yours! :sweat_smile:
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PS : If you ' re a returning reader, you can learn about the new modifications [here](https://github.com/satwikkansal/wtfpython/releases/) (the examples marked with asterisk are the ones added in the latest major revision).
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So , here we go . . .
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# Table of Contents
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< ! - - Generated using " markdown-toc -i README.md --maxdepth 3 " - - >
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< ! - - toc - - >
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- [ Structure of the Examples ] ( #structure-of-the-examples)
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+ [ ▶ Some fancy Title ] ( #-some-fancy-title)
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- [ Usage ] ( #usage)
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- [ 👀 Examples ] ( #-examples)
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* [ Section : Strain your brain ! ] ( #section-strain-your-brain)
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+ [ ▶ First things first ! * ] ( #-first-things-first-)
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+ [ ▶ Strings can be tricky sometimes ] ( #-strings-can-be-tricky-sometimes)
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+ [ ▶ Be careful with chained operations ] ( #-be-careful-with-chained-operations)
+ [ ▶ How not to use ` is ` operator ] ( #-how-not-to-use-is-operator)
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+ [ ▶ Hash brownies ] ( #-hash-brownies)
+ [ ▶ Deep down , we ' re all the same.](#-deep-down-were-all-the-same)
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+ [ ▶ Disorder within order * ] ( #-disorder-within-order-)
+ [ ▶ Keep trying . . . * ] ( #-keep-trying-)
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+ [ ▶ For what ? ] ( #-for-what)
+ [ ▶ Evaluation time discrepancy ] ( #-evaluation-time-discrepancy)
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+ [ ▶ ` is not . . . ` is not ` is ( not . . . ) ` ] ( #-is-not--is-not-is-not-)
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+ [ ▶ A tic - tac - toe where X wins in the first attempt ! ] ( #-a-tic-tac-toe-where-x-wins-in-the-first-attempt)
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+ [ ▶ Schrödinger ' s variable](#-schrödingers-variable-)
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+ [ ▶ The chicken - egg problem * ] ( #-the-chicken-egg-problem-)
+ [ ▶ Subclass relationships ] ( #-subclass-relationships)
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+ [ ▶ Methods equality and identity ] ( #-methods-equality-and-identity)
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+ [ ▶ All - true - ation * ] ( #-all-true-ation-)
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+ [ ▶ The surprising comma ] ( #-the-surprising-comma)
+ [ ▶ Strings and the backslashes ] ( #-strings-and-the-backslashes)
+ [ ▶ not knot ! ] ( #-not-knot)
+ [ ▶ Half triple - quoted strings ] ( #-half-triple-quoted-strings)
+ [ ▶ What ' s wrong with booleans?](#-whats-wrong-with-booleans)
+ [ ▶ Class attributes and instance attributes ] ( #-class-attributes-and-instance-attributes)
+ [ ▶ yielding None ] ( #-yielding-none)
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+ [ ▶ Yielding from . . . return ! * ] ( #-yielding-from-return-)
+ [ ▶ Nan - reflexivity * ] ( #-nan-reflexivity-)
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+ [ ▶ Mutating the immutable ! ] ( #-mutating-the-immutable)
+ [ ▶ The disappearing variable from outer scope ] ( #-the-disappearing-variable-from-outer-scope)
+ [ ▶ The mysterious key type conversion ] ( #-the-mysterious-key-type-conversion)
+ [ ▶ Let ' s see if you can guess this?](#-lets-see-if-you-can-guess-this)
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* [ Section : Slippery Slopes ] ( #section-slippery-slopes)
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+ [ ▶ Modifying a dictionary while iterating over it ] ( #-modifying-a-dictionary-while-iterating-over-it)
+ [ ▶ Stubborn ` del ` operation ] ( #-stubborn-del-operation)
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+ [ ▶ The out of scope variable ] ( #-the-out-of-scope-variable)
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+ [ ▶ Deleting a list item while iterating ] ( #-deleting-a-list-item-while-iterating)
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+ [ ▶ Lossy zip of iterators * ] ( #-lossy-zip-of-iterators-)
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+ [ ▶ Loop variables leaking out ! ] ( #-loop-variables-leaking-out)
+ [ ▶ Beware of default mutable arguments ! ] ( #-beware-of-default-mutable-arguments)
+ [ ▶ Catching the Exceptions ] ( #-catching-the-exceptions)
+ [ ▶ Same operands , different story ! ] ( #-same-operands-different-story)
+ [ ▶ Name resolution ignoring class scope ] ( #-name-resolution-ignoring-class-scope)
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+ [ ▶ Needles in a Haystack * ] ( #-needles-in-a-haystack-)
+ [ ▶ Splitsies * ] ( #-splitsies-)
+ [ ▶ Wild imports * ] ( #-wild-imports-)
+ [ ▶ All sorted ? * ] ( #-all-sorted-)
+ [ ▶ Midnight time doesn ' t exist?](#-midnight-time-doesnt-exist)
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* [ Section : The Hidden treasures ! ] ( #section-the-hidden-treasures)
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+ [ ▶ Okay Python , Can you make me fly ? ] ( #-okay-python-can-you-make-me-fly)
+ [ ▶ ` goto ` , but why ? ] ( #-goto-but-why)
+ [ ▶ Brace yourself ! ] ( #-brace-yourself)
+ [ ▶ Let ' s meet Friendly Language Uncle For Life](#-lets-meet-friendly-language-uncle-for-life)
+ [ ▶ Even Python understands that love is complicated ] ( #-even-python-understands-that-love-is-complicated)
+ [ ▶ Yes , it exists ! ] ( #-yes-it-exists)
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+ [ ▶ Ellipsis * ] ( #-ellipsis-)
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+ [ ▶ Inpinity ] ( #-inpinity)
+ [ ▶ Let ' s mangle](#-lets-mangle)
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* [ Section : Appearances are deceptive ! ] ( #section-appearances-are-deceptive)
+ [ ▶ Skipping lines ? ] ( #-skipping-lines)
+ [ ▶ Teleportation ] ( #-teleportation)
+ [ ▶ Well , something is fishy . . . ] ( #-well-something-is-fishy)
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* [ Section : Miscellaneous ] ( #section-miscellaneous)
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+ [ ▶ ` + = ` is faster ] ( #--is-faster)
+ [ ▶ Let ' s make a giant string!](#-lets-make-a-giant-string)
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+ [ ▶ Slowing down ` dict ` lookups * ] ( #-slowing-down-dict-lookups-)
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+ [ ▶ Bloating instance ` dict ` s * ] ( #-bloating-instance-dicts-)
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+ [ ▶ Minor Ones * ] ( #-minor-ones-)
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- [ Contributing ] ( #contributing)
- [ Acknowledgements ] ( #acknowledgements)
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- [ 🎓 License ] ( #-license)
* [ Surprise your friends as well ! ] ( #surprise-your-friends-as-well)
* [ More content like this ? ] ( #more-content-like-this)
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< ! - - tocstop - - >
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# Structure of the Examples
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All the examples are structured like below :
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> ### ▶ Some fancy Title
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>
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> ` ` ` py
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> # Set up the code.
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> # Preparation for the magic...
> ` ` `
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>
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> * * Output ( Python version ( s ) ) : * *
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>
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> ` ` ` py
> >> > triggering_statement
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> Some unexpected output
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> ` ` `
> ( Optional ) : One line describing the unexpected output .
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>
>
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> #### 💡 Explanation:
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>
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> * Brief explanation of what ' s happening and why is it happening.
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> ` ` ` py
> # Set up code
> # More examples for further clarification (if necessary)
> ` ` `
> * * Output ( Python version ( s ) ) : * *
>
> ` ` ` py
> >> > trigger # some example that makes it easy to unveil the magic
> # some justified output
> ` ` `
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* * Note : * * All the examples are tested on Python 3.5 .2 interactive interpreter , and they should work for all the Python versions unless explicitly specified before the output .
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# Usage
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A nice way to get the most out of these examples , in my opinion , is to read them chronologically , and for every example :
- Carefully read the initial code for setting up the example . If you ' re an experienced Python programmer, you ' ll successfully anticipate what ' s going to happen next most of the time.
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- Read the output snippets and ,
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+ Check if the outputs are the same as you ' d expect.
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+ Make sure if you know the exact reason behind the output being the way it is .
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- If the answer is no ( which is perfectly okay ) , take a deep breath , and read the explanation ( and if you still don ' t understand, shout out! and create an issue [here](https://github.com/satwikkansal/wtfpython/issues/new)).
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- If yes , give a gentle pat on your back , and you may skip to the next example .
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PS : You can also read WTFPython at the command line using the [ pypi package ] ( https : / / pypi . python . org / pypi / wtfpython ) ,
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` ` ` sh
$ pip install wtfpython - U
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$ wtfpython
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` ` `
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- - -
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# 👀 Examples
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## Section: Strain your brain!
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### ▶ First things first! *
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< ! - - Example ID : d3d73936 - 3 cf1 - 4632 - b5ab - 817981338863 - - >
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< ! - - read - only - - >
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For some reason , the Python 3.8 ' s " Walrus " operator (`:=`) has become quite popular. Let ' s check it out ,
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1 \.
` ` ` py
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# Python version 3.8+
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>> > a = " wtf_walrus "
>> > a
' wtf_walrus '
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>> > a := " wtf_walrus "
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File " <stdin> " , line 1
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a := " wtf_walrus "
^
SyntaxError : invalid syntax
>> > ( a := " wtf_walrus " ) # This works though
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' wtf_walrus '
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>> > a
' wtf_walrus '
` ` `
2 \.
` ` ` py
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# Python version 3.8+
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>> > a = 6 , 9
>> > a
( 6 , 9 )
>> > ( a := 6 , 9 )
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( 6 , 9 )
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>> > a
6
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>> > a , b = 6 , 9 # Typical unpacking
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>> > a , b
( 6 , 9 )
>> > ( a , b = 16 , 19 ) # Oops
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File " <stdin> " , line 1
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( a , b = 6 , 9 )
^
SyntaxError : invalid syntax
>> > ( a , b := 16 , 19 ) # This prints out a weird 3-tuple
( 6 , 16 , 19 )
>> > a # a is still unchanged?
6
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>> > b
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16
` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation
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* * Quick walrus operator refresher * *
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The Walrus operator ( ` := ` ) was introduced in Python 3.8 , it can be useful in situations where you ' d want to assign values to variables within an expression.
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` ` ` py
def some_func ( ) :
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# Assume some expensive computation here
# time.sleep(1000)
return 5
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# So instead of,
if some_func ( ) :
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print ( some_func ( ) ) # Which is bad practice since computation is happening twice
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# or
a = some_func ( )
if a :
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print ( a )
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# Now you can concisely write
if a := some_func ( ) :
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print ( a )
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` ` `
* * Output ( > 3.8 ) : * *
` ` ` py
5
5
5
` ` `
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This saved one line of code , and implicitly prevented invoking ` some_func ` twice .
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- Unparenthesized " assignment expression " ( use of walrus operator ) , is restricted at the top level , hence the ` SyntaxError ` in the ` a := " wtf_walrus " ` statement of the first snippet . Parenthesizing it worked as expected and assigned ` a ` .
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- As usual , parenthesizing of an expression containing ` = ` operator is not allowed . Hence the syntax error in ` ( a , b = 6 , 9 ) ` .
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- The syntax of the Walrus operator is of the form ` NAME := expr ` , where ` NAME ` is a valid identifier , and ` expr ` is a valid expression . Hence , iterable packing and unpacking are not supported which means ,
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- ` ( a := 6 , 9 ) ` is equivalent to ` ( ( a := 6 ) , 9 ) ` and ultimately ` ( a , 9 ) ` ( where ` a ` ' s value is 6 ' )
` ` ` py
>> > ( a := 6 , 9 ) == ( ( a := 6 ) , 9 )
True
>> > x = ( a := 696 , 9 )
>> > x
( 696 , 9 )
>> > x [ 0 ] is a # Both reference same memory location
True
` ` `
- Similarly , ` ( a , b := 16 , 19 ) ` is equivalent to ` ( a , ( b := 16 ) , 19 ) ` which is nothing but a 3 - tuple .
- - -
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### ▶ Strings can be tricky sometimes
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< ! - - Example ID : 30 f1d3fc - e267 - 4 b30 - 84 ef - 4 d9e7091ac1a - - - >
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1 \.
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` ` ` py
>> > a = " some_string "
>> > id ( a )
140420665652016
>> > id ( " some " + " _ " + " string " ) # Notice that both the ids are same.
140420665652016
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` ` `
2 \.
` ` ` py
>> > a = " wtf "
>> > b = " wtf "
>> > a is b
True
>> > a = " wtf! "
>> > b = " wtf! "
>> > a is b
False
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` ` `
3 \.
` ` ` py
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>> > a , b = " wtf! " , " wtf! "
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>> > a is b # All versions except 3.7.x
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True
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>> > a = " wtf! " ; b = " wtf! "
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>> > a is b # This will print True or False depending on where you're invoking it (python shell / ipython / as a script)
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False
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` ` `
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` ` ` py
# This time in file some_file.py
a = " wtf! "
b = " wtf! "
print ( a is b )
# prints True when the module is invoked!
` ` `
4 \.
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* * Output ( < Python3 .7 ) * *
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` ` ` py
>> > ' a ' * 20 is ' aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa '
True
>> > ' a ' * 21 is ' aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa '
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False
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` ` `
Makes sense , right ?
#### 💡 Explanation:
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+ The behavior in first and second snippets is due to a CPython optimization ( called string interning ) that tries to use existing immutable objects in some cases rather than creating a new object every time .
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+ After being " interned, " many variables may reference the same string object in memory ( saving memory thereby ) .
+ In the snippets above , strings are implicitly interned . The decision of when to implicitly intern a string is implementation - dependent . There are some rules that can be used to guess if a string will be interned or not :
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* All length 0 and length 1 strings are interned .
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* Strings are interned at compile time ( ` ' wtf ' ` will be interned but ` ' ' . join ( [ ' w ' , ' t ' , ' f ' ] ) ` will not be interned )
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* Strings that are not composed of ASCII letters , digits or underscores , are not interned . This explains why ` ' wtf! ' ` was not interned due to ` ! ` . CPython implementation of this rule can be found [ here ] ( https : / / github . com / python / cpython / blob / 3.6 / Objects / codeobject . c #L19)
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! [ image ] ( / images / string - intern / string_intern . png )
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+ When ` a ` and ` b ` are set to ` " wtf! " ` in the same line , the Python interpreter creates a new object , then references the second variable at the same time . If you do it on separate lines , it doesn ' t " know " that there ' s already ` " wtf! " ` as an object ( because ` " wtf! " ` is not implicitly interned as per the facts mentioned above ) . It ' s a compile-time optimization. This optimization doesn ' t apply to 3.7 . x versions of CPython ( check this [ issue ] ( https : / / github . com / satwikkansal / wtfpython / issues / 100 ) for more discussion ) .
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+ A compile unit in an interactive environment like IPython consists of a single statement , whereas it consists of the entire module in case of modules . ` a , b = " wtf! " , " wtf! " ` is single statement , whereas ` a = " wtf! " ; b = " wtf! " ` are two statements in a single line . This explains why the identities are different in ` a = " wtf! " ; b = " wtf! " ` , and also explain why they are same when invoked in ` some_file . py `
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+ The abrupt change in the output of the fourth snippet is due to a [ peephole optimization ] ( https : / / en . wikipedia . org / wiki / Peephole_optimization ) technique known as Constant folding . This means the expression ` ' a ' * 20 ` is replaced by ` ' aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa ' ` during compilation to save a few clock cycles during runtime . Constant folding only occurs for strings having a length of less than 21. ( Why ? Imagine the size of ` . pyc ` file generated as a result of the expression ` ' a ' * 10 * * 10 ` ) . [ Here ' s](https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/3.6/Python/peephole.c#L288) the implementation source for the same.
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+ Note : In Python 3.7 , Constant folding was moved out from peephole optimizer to the new AST optimizer with some change in logic as well , so the fourth snippet doesn ' t work for Python 3.7. You can read more about the change [here](https://bugs.python.org/issue11549).
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- - -
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### ▶ Be careful with chained operations
< ! - - Example ID : 07974979 - 9 c86 - 4720 - 80 bd - 467 aa19470d9 - - - >
` ` ` py
>> > ( False == False ) in [ False ] # makes sense
False
>> > False == ( False in [ False ] ) # makes sense
False
>> > False == False in [ False ] # now what?
True
>> > True is False == False
False
>> > False is False is False
True
>> > 1 > 0 < 1
True
>> > ( 1 > 0 ) < 1
False
>> > 1 > ( 0 < 1 )
False
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
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As per https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / reference / expressions . html #membership-test-operations
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> Formally , if a , b , c , . . . , y , z are expressions and op1 , op2 , . . . , opN are comparison operators , then a op1 b op2 c . . . y opN z is equivalent to a op1 b and b op2 c and . . . y opN z , except that each expression is evaluated at most once .
While such behavior might seem silly to you in the above examples , it ' s fantastic with stuff like `a == b == c` and `0 <= x <= 100`.
* ` False is False is False ` is equivalent to ` ( False is False ) and ( False is False ) `
* ` True is False == False ` is equivalent to ` True is False and False == False ` and since the first part of the statement ( ` True is False ` ) evaluates to ` False ` , the overall expression evaluates to ` False ` .
* ` 1 > 0 < 1 ` is equivalent to ` 1 > 0 and 0 < 1 ` which evaluates to ` True ` .
* The expression ` ( 1 > 0 ) < 1 ` is equivalent to ` True < 1 ` and
` ` ` py
>> > int ( True )
1
>> > True + 1 #not relevant for this example, but just for fun
2
` ` `
So , ` 1 < 1 ` evaluates to ` False `
- - -
### ▶ How not to use `is` operator
< ! - - Example ID : 230 fa2ac - ab36 - 4 ad1 - b675 - 5 f5a1c1a6217 - - - >
The following is a very famous example present all over the internet .
1 \.
` ` ` py
>> > a = 256
>> > b = 256
>> > a is b
True
>> > a = 257
>> > b = 257
>> > a is b
False
` ` `
2 \.
` ` ` py
>> > a = [ ]
>> > b = [ ]
>> > a is b
False
>> > a = tuple ( )
>> > b = tuple ( )
>> > a is b
True
` ` `
3 \.
* * Output * *
` ` ` py
>> > a , b = 257 , 257
>> > a is b
True
` ` `
* * Output ( Python 3.7 . x specifically ) * *
` ` ` py
>> > a , b = 257 , 257
>> a is b
False
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
* * The difference between ` is ` and ` == ` * *
* ` is ` operator checks if both the operands refer to the same object ( i . e . , it checks if the identity of the operands matches or not ) .
* ` == ` operator compares the values of both the operands and checks if they are the same .
* So ` is ` is for reference equality and ` == ` is for value equality . An example to clear things up ,
` ` ` py
>> > class A : pass
>> > A ( ) is A ( ) # These are two empty objects at two different memory locations.
False
` ` `
* * ` 256 ` is an existing object but ` 257 ` isn ' t**
When you start up python the numbers from ` - 5 ` to ` 256 ` will be allocated . These numbers are used a lot , so it makes sense just to have them ready .
Quoting from https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / c - api / long . html
> The current implementation keeps an array of integer objects for all integers between - 5 and 256 , when you create an int in that range you just get back a reference to the existing object . So it should be possible to change the value of 1. I suspect the behavior of Python , in this case , is undefined . : - )
` ` ` py
>> > id ( 256 )
10922528
>> > a = 256
>> > b = 256
>> > id ( a )
10922528
>> > id ( b )
10922528
>> > id ( 257 )
140084850247312
>> > x = 257
>> > y = 257
>> > id ( x )
140084850247440
>> > id ( y )
140084850247344
` ` `
Here the interpreter isn ' t smart enough while executing `y = 257` to recognize that we ' ve already created an integer of the value ` 257 , ` and so it goes on to create another object in the memory .
Similar optimization applies to other * * immutable * * objects like empty tuples as well . Since lists are mutable , that ' s why `[] is []` will return `False` and `() is ()` will return `True`. This explains our second snippet. Let ' s move on to the third one ,
* * Both ` a ` and ` b ` refer to the same object when initialized with same value in the same line . * *
* * Output * *
` ` ` py
>> > a , b = 257 , 257
>> > id ( a )
140640774013296
>> > id ( b )
140640774013296
>> > a = 257
>> > b = 257
>> > id ( a )
140640774013392
>> > id ( b )
140640774013488
` ` `
* When a and b are set to ` 257 ` in the same line , the Python interpreter creates a new object , then references the second variable at the same time . If you do it on separate lines , it doesn ' t " know " that there ' s already ` 257 ` as an object .
* It ' s a compiler optimization and specifically applies to the interactive environment. When you enter two lines in a live interpreter, they ' re compiled separately , therefore optimized separately . If you were to try this example in a ` . py ` file , you would not see the same behavior , because the file is compiled all at once . This optimization is not limited to integers , it works for other immutable data types like strings ( check the " Strings are tricky example " ) and floats as well ,
` ` ` py
>> > a , b = 257.0 , 257.0
>> > a is b
True
` ` `
* Why didn ' t this work for Python 3.7? The abstract reason is because such compiler optimizations are implementation specific (i.e. may change with version, OS, etc). I ' m still figuring out what exact implementation change cause the issue , you can check out this [ issue ] ( https : / / github . com / satwikkansal / wtfpython / issues / 100 ) for updates .
- - -
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### ▶ Hash brownies
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< ! - - Example ID : eb17db53 - 49 fd - 4 b61 - 85 d6 - 345 c5ca213ff - - - >
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1 \.
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` ` ` py
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some_dict = { }
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some_dict [ 5.5 ] = " JavaScript "
some_dict [ 5.0 ] = " Ruby "
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some_dict [ 5 ] = " Python "
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
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>> > some_dict [ 5.5 ]
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" JavaScript "
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>> > some_dict [ 5.0 ] # "Python" destroyed the existence of "Ruby"?
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" Python "
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>> > some_dict [ 5 ]
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" Python "
>> > complex_five = 5 + 0 j
>> > type ( complex_five )
complex
>> > some_dict [ complex_five ]
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" Python "
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` ` `
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So , why is Python all over the place ?
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#### 💡 Explanation
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* Uniqueness of keys in a Python dictionary is by * equivalence * , not identity . So even though ` 5 ` , ` 5.0 ` , and ` 5 + 0 j ` are distinct objects of different types , since they ' re equal, they can ' t both be in the same ` dict ` ( or ` set ` ) . As soon as you insert any one of them , attempting to look up any distinct but equivalent key will succeed with the original mapped value ( rather than failing with a ` KeyError ` ) :
` ` ` py
>> > 5 == 5.0 == 5 + 0 j
True
>> > 5 is not 5.0 is not 5 + 0 j
True
>> > some_dict = { }
>> > some_dict [ 5.0 ] = " Ruby "
>> > 5.0 in some_dict
True
>> > ( 5 in some_dict ) and ( 5 + 0 j in some_dict )
True
` ` `
* This applies when setting an item as well . So when you do ` some_dict [ 5 ] = " Python " ` , Python finds the existing item with equivalent key ` 5.0 - > " Ruby " ` , overwrites its value in place , and leaves the original key alone .
` ` ` py
>> > some_dict
{ 5.0 : ' Ruby ' }
>> > some_dict [ 5 ] = " Python "
>> > some_dict
{ 5.0 : ' Python ' }
` ` `
* So how can we update the key to ` 5 ` ( instead of ` 5.0 ` ) ? We can ' t actually do this update in place, but what we can do is first delete the key (`del some_dict[5.0]`), and then set it (`some_dict[5]`) to get the integer `5` as the key instead of floating `5.0`, though this should be needed in rare cases.
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* How did Python find ` 5 ` in a dictionary containing ` 5.0 ` ? Python does this in constant time without having to scan through every item by using hash functions . When Python looks up a key ` foo ` in a dict , it first computes ` hash ( foo ) ` ( which runs in constant - time ) . Since in Python it is required that objects that compare equal also have the same hash value ( [ docs ] ( https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / reference / datamodel . html #object.__hash__) here), `5`, `5.0`, and `5 + 0j` have the same hash value.
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` ` ` py
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>> > 5 == 5.0 == 5 + 0 j
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True
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>> > hash ( 5 ) == hash ( 5.0 ) == hash ( 5 + 0 j )
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True
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` ` `
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* * Note : * * The inverse is not necessarily true : Objects with equal hash values may themselves be unequal . ( This causes what ' s known as a [hash collision](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collision_(computer_science)), and degrades the constant-time performance that hashing usually provides.)
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- - -
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### ▶ Deep down, we're all the same.
< ! - - Example ID : 8 f99a35f - 1736 - 43e2 - 920 d - 3 b78ec35da9b - - - >
` ` ` py
class WTF :
pass
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > WTF ( ) == WTF ( ) # two different instances can't be equal
False
>> > WTF ( ) is WTF ( ) # identities are also different
False
>> > hash ( WTF ( ) ) == hash ( WTF ( ) ) # hashes _should_ be different as well
True
>> > id ( WTF ( ) ) == id ( WTF ( ) )
True
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
* When ` id ` was called , Python created a ` WTF ` class object and passed it to the ` id ` function . The ` id ` function takes its ` id ` ( its memory location ) , and throws away the object . The object is destroyed .
* When we do this twice in succession , Python allocates the same memory location to this second object as well . Since ( in CPython ) ` id ` uses the memory location as the object id , the id of the two objects is the same .
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* So , the object ' s id is unique only for the lifetime of the object. After the object is destroyed, or before it is created, something else can have the same id.
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* But why did the ` is ` operator evaluated to ` False ` ? Let ' s see with this snippet.
` ` ` py
class WTF ( object ) :
def __init__ ( self ) : print ( " I " )
def __del__ ( self ) : print ( " D " )
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > WTF ( ) is WTF ( )
I
I
D
D
False
>> > id ( WTF ( ) ) == id ( WTF ( ) )
I
D
I
D
True
` ` `
As you may observe , the order in which the objects are destroyed is what made all the difference here .
- - -
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### ▶ Disorder within order *
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< ! - - Example ID : 91 bff1f8 - 541 d - 455 a - 9 de4 - 6 cd8ff00ea66 - - - >
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` ` ` py
from collections import OrderedDict
dictionary = dict ( )
dictionary [ 1 ] = ' a ' ; dictionary [ 2 ] = ' b ' ;
ordered_dict = OrderedDict ( )
ordered_dict [ 1 ] = ' a ' ; ordered_dict [ 2 ] = ' b ' ;
another_ordered_dict = OrderedDict ( )
another_ordered_dict [ 2 ] = ' b ' ; another_ordered_dict [ 1 ] = ' a ' ;
class DictWithHash ( dict ) :
"""
A dict that also implements __hash__ magic .
"""
__hash__ = lambda self : 0
class OrderedDictWithHash ( OrderedDict ) :
"""
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An OrderedDict that also implements __hash__ magic .
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"""
__hash__ = lambda self : 0
` ` `
* * Output * *
` ` ` py
>> > dictionary == ordered_dict # If a == b
True
>> > dictionary == another_ordered_dict # and b == c
True
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>> > ordered_dict == another_ordered_dict # then why isn't c == a ??
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False
# We all know that a set consists of only unique elements,
# let's try making a set of these dictionaries and see what happens...
>> > len ( { dictionary , ordered_dict , another_ordered_dict } )
Traceback ( most recent call last ) :
File " <stdin> " , line 1 , in < module >
TypeError : unhashable type : ' dict '
# Makes sense since dict don't have __hash__ implemented, let's use
# our wrapper classes.
>> > dictionary = DictWithHash ( )
>> > dictionary [ 1 ] = ' a ' ; dictionary [ 2 ] = ' b ' ;
>> > ordered_dict = OrderedDictWithHash ( )
>> > ordered_dict [ 1 ] = ' a ' ; ordered_dict [ 2 ] = ' b ' ;
>> > another_ordered_dict = OrderedDictWithHash ( )
>> > another_ordered_dict [ 2 ] = ' b ' ; another_ordered_dict [ 1 ] = ' a ' ;
>> > len ( { dictionary , ordered_dict , another_ordered_dict } )
1
>> > len ( { ordered_dict , another_ordered_dict , dictionary } ) # changing the order
2
` ` `
What is going on here ?
#### 💡 Explanation:
- The reason why intransitive equality didn ' t hold among `dictionary`, `ordered_dict` and `another_ordered_dict` is because of the way `__eq__` method is implemented in `OrderedDict` class. From the [docs](https://docs.python.org/3/library/collections.html#ordereddict-objects)
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> Equality tests between OrderedDict objects are order - sensitive and are implemented as ` list ( od1 . items ( ) ) == list ( od2 . items ( ) ) ` . Equality tests between ` OrderedDict ` objects and other Mapping objects are order - insensitive like regular dictionaries .
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- The reason for this equality in behavior is that it allows ` OrderedDict ` objects to be directly substituted anywhere a regular dictionary is used .
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- Okay , so why did changing the order affect the length of the generated ` set ` object ? The answer is the lack of intransitive equality only . Since sets are " unordered " collections of unique elements , the order in which elements are inserted shouldn ' t matter. But in this case, it does matter. Let ' s break it down a bit ,
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` ` ` py
>> > some_set = set ( )
>> > some_set . add ( dictionary ) # these are the mapping objects from the snippets above
>> > ordered_dict in some_set
True
>> > some_set . add ( ordered_dict )
>> > len ( some_set )
1
>> > another_ordered_dict in some_set
True
>> > some_set . add ( another_ordered_dict )
>> > len ( some_set )
1
>> > another_set = set ( )
>> > another_set . add ( ordered_dict )
>> > another_ordered_dict in another_set
False
>> > another_set . add ( another_ordered_dict )
>> > len ( another_set )
2
>> > dictionary in another_set
True
>> > another_set . add ( another_ordered_dict )
>> > len ( another_set )
2
` ` `
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So the inconsistency is due to ` another_ordered_dict in another_set ` being ` False ` because ` ordered_dict ` was already present in ` another_set ` and as observed before , ` ordered_dict == another_ordered_dict ` is ` False ` .
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- - -
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### ▶ Keep trying... *
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< ! - - Example ID : b4349443 - e89f - 4 d25 - a109 - 82616 be9d41a - - - >
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` ` ` py
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def some_func ( ) :
try :
return ' from_try '
finally :
return ' from_finally '
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def another_func ( ) :
for _ in range ( 3 ) :
try :
continue
finally :
print ( " Finally! " )
def one_more_func ( ) : # A gotcha!
try :
for i in range ( 3 ) :
try :
1 / i
except ZeroDivisionError :
# Let's throw it here and handle it outside for loop
raise ZeroDivisionError ( " A trivial divide by zero error " )
finally :
print ( " Iteration " , i )
break
except ZeroDivisionError as e :
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print ( " Zero division error occurred " , e )
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
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>> > some_func ( )
' from_finally '
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>> > another_func ( )
Finally !
Finally !
Finally !
>> > 1 / 0
Traceback ( most recent call last ) :
File " <stdin> " , line 1 , in < module >
ZeroDivisionError : division by zero
>> > one_more_func ( )
Iteration 0
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` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation:
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- When a ` return ` , ` break ` or ` continue ` statement is executed in the ` try ` suite of a " try…finally " statement , the ` finally ` clause is also executed on the way out .
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- The return value of a function is determined by the last ` return ` statement executed . Since the ` finally ` clause always executes , a ` return ` statement executed in the ` finally ` clause will always be the last one executed .
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- The caveat here is , if the finally clause executes a ` return ` or ` break ` statement , the temporarily saved exception is discarded .
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- - -
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### ▶ For what?
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< ! - - Example ID : 64 a9dccf - 5083 - 4 bc9 - 98 aa - 8 aeecde4f210 - - - >
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` ` ` py
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some_string = " wtf "
some_dict = { }
for i , some_dict [ i ] in enumerate ( some_string ) :
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i = 10
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
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>> > some_dict # An indexed dict appears.
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{ 0 : ' w ' , 1 : ' t ' , 2 : ' f ' }
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
* A ` for ` statement is defined in the [ Python grammar ] ( https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / reference / grammar . html ) as :
` ` `
for_stmt : ' for ' exprlist ' in ' testlist ' : ' suite [ ' else ' ' : ' suite ]
` ` `
Where ` exprlist ` is the assignment target . This means that the equivalent of ` { exprlist } = { next_value } ` is * * executed for each item * * in the iterable .
An interesting example that illustrates this :
` ` ` py
for i in range ( 4 ) :
print ( i )
i = 10
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` `
0
1
2
3
` ` `
Did you expect the loop to run just once ?
* * 💡 Explanation : * *
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- The assignment statement ` i = 10 ` never affects the iterations of the loop because of the way for loops work in Python . Before the beginning of every iteration , the next item provided by the iterator ( ` range ( 4 ) ` in this case ) is unpacked and assigned the target list variables ( ` i ` in this case ) .
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* The ` enumerate ( some_string ) ` function yields a new value ` i ` ( a counter going up ) and a character from the ` some_string ` in each iteration . It then sets the ( just assigned ) ` i ` key of the dictionary ` some_dict ` to that character . The unrolling of the loop can be simplified as :
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` ` ` py
>> > i , some_dict [ i ] = ( 0 , ' w ' )
>> > i , some_dict [ i ] = ( 1 , ' t ' )
>> > i , some_dict [ i ] = ( 2 , ' f ' )
>> > some_dict
` ` `
- - -
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### ▶ Evaluation time discrepancy
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< ! - - Example ID : 6 aa11a4b - 4 cf1 - 467 a - b43a - 810731517e98 - - - >
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1 \.
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` ` ` py
array = [ 1 , 8 , 15 ]
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# A typical generator expression
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gen = ( x for x in array if array . count ( x ) > 0 )
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array = [ 2 , 8 , 22 ]
` ` `
* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
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>> > print ( list ( gen ) ) # Where did the other values go?
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[ 8 ]
` ` `
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2 \.
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` ` ` py
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array_1 = [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]
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gen_1 = ( x for x in array_1 )
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array_1 = [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ]
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array_2 = [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]
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gen_2 = ( x for x in array_2 )
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array_2 [ : ] = [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ]
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
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>> > print ( list ( gen_1 ) )
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[ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]
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>> > print ( list ( gen_2 ) )
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[ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ]
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` ` `
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3 \.
` ` ` py
array_3 = [ 1 , 2 , 3 ]
array_4 = [ 10 , 20 , 30 ]
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gen = ( i + j for i in array_3 for j in array_4 )
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array_3 = [ 4 , 5 , 6 ]
array_4 = [ 400 , 500 , 600 ]
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
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>> > print ( list ( gen ) )
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[ 401 , 501 , 601 , 402 , 502 , 602 , 403 , 503 , 603 ]
` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation
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- In a [ generator ] ( https : / / wiki . python . org / moin / Generators ) expression , the ` in ` clause is evaluated at declaration time , but the conditional clause is evaluated at runtime .
- So before runtime , ` array ` is re - assigned to the list ` [ 2 , 8 , 22 ] ` , and since out of ` 1 ` , ` 8 ` and ` 15 ` , only the count of ` 8 ` is greater than ` 0 ` , the generator only yields ` 8 ` .
- The differences in the output of ` g1 ` and ` g2 ` in the second part is due the way variables ` array_1 ` and ` array_2 ` are re - assigned values .
- In the first case , ` array_1 ` is binded to the new object ` [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ] ` and since the ` in ` clause is evaluated at the declaration time it still refers to the old object ` [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ] ` ( which is not destroyed ) .
- In the second case , the slice assignment to ` array_2 ` updates the same old object ` [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ] ` to ` [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ] ` . Hence both the ` g2 ` and ` array_2 ` still have reference to the same object ( which has now been updated to ` [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ] ` ) .
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- Okay , going by the logic discussed so far , shouldn ' t be the value of `list(g)` in the third snippet be `[11, 21, 31, 12, 22, 32, 13, 23, 33]`? (because `array_3` and `array_4` are going to behave just like `array_1`). The reason why (only) `array_4` values got updated is explained in [PEP-289](https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0289/#the-details)
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> Only the outermost for - expression is evaluated immediately , the other expressions are deferred until the generator is run .
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- - -
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### ▶ `is not ...` is not `is (not ...)`
< ! - - Example ID : b26fb1ed - 0 c7d - 4 b9c - 8 c6d - 94 a58a055c0d - - - >
` ` ` py
>> > ' something ' is not None
True
>> > ' something ' is ( not None )
False
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation
- ` is not ` is a single binary operator , and has behavior different than using ` is ` and ` not ` separated .
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- ` is not ` evaluates to ` False ` if the variables on either side of the operator point to the same object and ` True ` otherwise .
- In the example , ` ( not None ) ` evaluates to ` True ` since the value ` None ` is ` False ` in a boolean context , so the expression becomes ` ' something ' is True ` .
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- - -
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### ▶ A tic-tac-toe where X wins in the first attempt!
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< ! - - Example ID : 69329249 - bdcb - 424 f - bd09 - cca2e6705a7a - - - >
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` ` ` py
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# Let's initialize a row
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row = [ " " ] * 3 #row i['', '', '']
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# Let's make a board
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board = [ row ] * 3
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` ` `
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* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
>> > board
[ [ ' ' , ' ' , ' ' ] , [ ' ' , ' ' , ' ' ] , [ ' ' , ' ' , ' ' ] ]
>> > board [ 0 ]
[ ' ' , ' ' , ' ' ]
>> > board [ 0 ] [ 0 ]
' '
>> > board [ 0 ] [ 0 ] = " X "
>> > board
[ [ ' X ' , ' ' , ' ' ] , [ ' X ' , ' ' , ' ' ] , [ ' X ' , ' ' , ' ' ] ]
` ` `
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We didn ' t assign three ` " X " `s, did we?
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#### 💡 Explanation:
When we initialize ` row ` variable , this visualization explains what happens in the memory
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! [ image ] ( / images / tic - tac - toe / after_row_initialized . png )
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And when the ` board ` is initialized by multiplying the ` row ` , this is what happens inside the memory ( each of the elements ` board [ 0 ] ` , ` board [ 1 ] ` and ` board [ 2 ] ` is a reference to the same list referred by ` row ` )
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! [ image ] ( / images / tic - tac - toe / after_board_initialized . png )
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We can avoid this scenario here by not using ` row ` variable to generate ` board ` . ( Asked in [ this ] ( https : / / github . com / satwikkansal / wtfpython / issues / 68 ) issue ) .
` ` ` py
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>> > board = [ [ ' ' ] * 3 for _ in range ( 3 ) ]
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>> > board [ 0 ] [ 0 ] = " X "
>> > board
[ [ ' X ' , ' ' , ' ' ] , [ ' ' , ' ' , ' ' ] , [ ' ' , ' ' , ' ' ] ]
` ` `
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- - -
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### ▶ Schrödinger's variable *
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< ! - - Example ID : 4 dc42f77 - 94 cb - 4 eb5 - a120 - 8203 d3ed7604 - - - >
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` ` ` py
funcs = [ ]
results = [ ]
for x in range ( 7 ) :
def some_func ( ) :
return x
funcs . append ( some_func )
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results . append ( some_func ( ) ) # note the function call here
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funcs_results = [ func ( ) for func in funcs ]
` ` `
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* * Output ( Python version ) : * *
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` ` ` py
>> > results
[ 0 , 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 ]
>> > funcs_results
[ 6 , 6 , 6 , 6 , 6 , 6 , 6 ]
` ` `
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The values of ` x ` were different in every iteration prior to appending ` some_func ` to ` funcs ` , but all the functions return 6 when they ' re evaluated after the loop completes.
2.
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` ` ` py
>> > powers_of_x = [ lambda x : x * * i for i in range ( 10 ) ]
>> > [ f ( 2 ) for f in powers_of_x ]
[ 512 , 512 , 512 , 512 , 512 , 512 , 512 , 512 , 512 , 512 ]
` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation:
* When defining a function inside a loop that uses the loop variable in its body , the loop function ' s closure is bound to the *variable*, not its *value*. The function looks up `x` in the surrounding context, rather than using the value of `x` at the time the function is created. So all of the functions use the latest value assigned to the variable for computation. We can see that it ' s using the ` x ` from the surrounding context ( i . e . * not * a local variable ) with :
` ` ` py
>> > import inspect
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>> > inspect . getclosurevars ( funcs [ 0 ] )
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ClosureVars ( nonlocals = { } , globals = { ' x ' : 6 } , builtins = { } , unbound = set ( ) )
` ` `
Since ` x ` is a global value , we can change the value that the ` funcs ` will lookup and return by updating ` x ` :
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` ` ` py
>> > x = 42
>> > [ func ( ) for func in funcs ]
[ 42 , 42 , 42 , 42 , 42 , 42 , 42 ]
` ` `
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* To get the desired behavior you can pass in the loop variable as a named variable to the function . * * Why does this work ? * * Because this will define the variable * inside * the function ' s scope. It will no longer go to the surrounding (global) scope to look up the variables value but will create a local variable that stores the value of `x` at that point in time.
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` ` ` py
funcs = [ ]
for x in range ( 7 ) :
def some_func ( x = x ) :
return x
funcs . append ( some_func )
` ` `
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* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > funcs_results = [ func ( ) for func in funcs ]
>> > funcs_results
[ 0 , 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 ]
` ` `
It is not longer using the ` x ` in the global scope :
` ` ` py
>> > inspect . getclosurevars ( funcs [ 0 ] )
ClosureVars ( nonlocals = { } , globals = { } , builtins = { } , unbound = set ( ) )
` ` `
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- - -
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### ▶ The chicken-egg problem *
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< ! - - Example ID : 60730 dc2 - 0 d79 - 4416 - 8568 - 2 a63323b3ce8 - - - >
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1 \.
` ` ` py
>> > isinstance ( 3 , int )
True
>> > isinstance ( type , object )
True
>> > isinstance ( object , type )
True
` ` `
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So which is the " ultimate " base class ? There ' s more to the confusion by the way,
2 \.
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` ` ` py
>> > class A : pass
>> > isinstance ( A , A )
False
>> > isinstance ( type , type )
True
>> > isinstance ( object , object )
True
` ` `
3 \.
` ` ` py
>> > issubclass ( int , object )
True
>> > issubclass ( type , object )
True
>> > issubclass ( object , type )
False
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation
- ` type ` is a [ metaclass ] ( https : / / realpython . com / python - metaclasses / ) in Python .
- * * Everything * * is an ` object ` in Python , which includes classes as well as their objects ( instances ) .
- class ` type ` is the metaclass of class ` object ` , and every class ( including ` type ` ) has inherited directly or indirectly from ` object ` .
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- There is no real base class among ` object ` and ` type ` . The confusion in the above snippets is arising because we ' re thinking about these relationships (`issubclass` and `isinstance`) in terms of Python classes. The relationship between `object` and `type` can ' t be reproduced in pure python . To be more precise the following relationships can ' t be reproduced in pure Python,
+ class A is an instance of class B , and class B is an instance of class A .
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+ class A is an instance of itself .
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- These relationships between ` object ` and ` type ` ( both being instances of each other as well as themselves ) exist in Python because of " cheating " at the implementation level .
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- - -
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### ▶ Subclass relationships
< ! - - Example ID : 9 f6d8cf0 - e1b5 - 42 d0 - 84 a0 - 4 cfab25a0bc0 - - - >
* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
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>> > from collections import Hashable
>> > issubclass ( list , object )
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True
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>> > issubclass ( object , Hashable )
True
>> > issubclass ( list , Hashable )
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False
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` ` `
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The Subclass relationships were expected to be transitive , right ? ( i . e . , if ` A ` is a subclass of ` B ` , and ` B ` is a subclass of ` C ` , the ` A ` _should_ a subclass of ` C ` )
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#### 💡 Explanation:
* Subclass relationships are not necessarily transitive in Python . Anyone is allowed to define their own , arbitrary ` __subclasscheck__ ` in a metaclass .
* When ` issubclass ( cls , Hashable ) ` is called , it simply looks for non - Falsey " `__hash__` " method in ` cls ` or anything it inherits from .
* Since ` object ` is hashable , but ` list ` is non - hashable , it breaks the transitivity relation .
* More detailed explanation can be found [ here ] ( https : / / www . naftaliharris . com / blog / python - subclass - intransitivity / ) .
- - -
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### ▶ Methods equality and identity
< ! - - Example ID : 94802911 - 48 fe - 4242 - defa - 728 ae893fa32 - - - >
1.
` ` ` py
class SomeClass :
def method ( self ) :
pass
@classmethod
def classm ( cls ) :
pass
@staticmethod
def staticm ( ) :
pass
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > print ( SomeClass . method is SomeClass . method )
True
>> > print ( SomeClass . classm is SomeClass . classm )
False
>> > print ( SomeClass . classm == SomeClass . classm )
True
>> > print ( SomeClass . staticm is SomeClass . staticm )
True
` ` `
Accessing ` classm ` twice , we get an equal object , but not the * same * one ? Let ' s see what happens
with instances of ` SomeClass ` :
2.
` ` ` py
o1 = SomeClass ( )
o2 = SomeClass ( )
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > print ( o1 . method == o2 . method )
False
>> > print ( o1 . method == o1 . method )
True
>> > print ( o1 . method is o1 . method )
False
>> > print ( o1 . classm is o1 . classm )
False
>> > print ( o1 . classm == o1 . classm == o2 . classm == SomeClass . classm )
True
>> > print ( o1 . staticm is o1 . staticm is o2 . staticm is SomeClass . staticm )
True
` ` `
Accessing ` classm ` or ` method ` twice , creates equal but not * same * objects for the same instance of ` SomeClass ` .
#### 💡 Explanation
* Functions are [ descriptors ] ( https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / howto / descriptor . html ) . Whenever a function is accessed as an
attribute , the descriptor is invoked , creating a method object which " binds " the function with the object owning the
attribute . If called , the method calls the function , implicitly passing the bound object as the first argument
( this is how we get ` self ` as the first argument , despite not passing it explicitly ) .
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` ` ` py
>> > o1 . method
< bound method SomeClass . method of < __main__ . SomeClass object at . . . >>
` ` `
* Accessing the attribute multiple times creates a method object every time ! Therefore ` o1 . method is o1 . method ` is
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never truthy . Accessing functions as class attributes ( as opposed to instance ) does not create methods , however ; so
` SomeClass . method is SomeClass . method ` is truthy .
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` ` ` py
>> > SomeClass . method
< function SomeClass . method at . . . >
` ` `
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* ` classmethod ` transforms functions into class methods . Class methods are descriptors that , when accessed , create
a method object which binds the * class * ( type ) of the object , instead of the object itself .
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` ` ` py
>> > o1 . classm
< bound method SomeClass . classm of < class ' __main__ . SomeClass ' >>
` ` `
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* Unlike functions , ` classmethod ` s will create a method also when accessed as class attributes ( in which case they
bind the class , not to the type of it ) . So ` SomeClass . classm is SomeClass . classm ` is falsy .
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` ` ` py
>> > SomeClass . classm
< bound method SomeClass . classm of < class ' __main__ . SomeClass ' >>
` ` `
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* A method object compares equal when both the functions are equal , and the bound objects are the same . So
` o1 . method == o1 . method ` is truthy , although not the same object in memory .
* ` staticmethod ` transforms functions into a " no-op " descriptor , which returns the function as - is . No method
objects are ever created , so comparison with ` is ` is truthy .
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` ` ` py
>> > o1 . staticm
< function SomeClass . staticm at . . . >
>> > SomeClass . staticm
< function SomeClass . staticm at . . . >
` ` `
* Having to create new " method " objects every time Python calls instance methods and having to modify the arguments
every time in order to insert ` self ` affected performance badly .
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CPython 3.7 [ solved it ] ( https : / / bugs . python . org / issue26110 ) by introducing new opcodes that deal with calling methods
without creating the temporary method objects . This is used only when the accessed function is actually called , so the
snippets here are not affected , and still generate methods : )
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### ▶ All-true-ation *
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< ! - - Example ID : dfe6d845 - e452 - 48 fe - a2da - 0 ed3869a8042 - - >
` ` ` py
>> > all ( [ True , True , True ] )
True
>> > all ( [ True , True , False ] )
False
>> > all ( [ ] )
True
>> > all ( [ [ ] ] )
False
>> > all ( [ [ [ ] ] ] )
True
` ` `
Why ' s this True-False alteration?
#### 💡 Explanation:
- The implementation of ` all ` function is equivalent to
- ` ` ` py
def all ( iterable ) :
for element in iterable :
if not element :
return False
return True
` ` `
- ` all ( [ ] ) ` returns ` True ` since the iterable is empty .
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- ` all ( [ [ ] ] ) ` returns ` False ` because the passed array has one element , ` [ ] ` , and in python , an empty list is falsy .
- ` all ( [ [ [ ] ] ] ) ` and higher recursive variants are always ` True ` . This is because the passed array ' s single element (`[[...]]`) is no longer empty, and lists with values are truthy.
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- - -
### ▶ The surprising comma
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< ! - - Example ID : 31 a819c8 - ed73 - 4 dcc - 84 eb - 91 bedbb51e58 - - - >
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* * Output ( < 3.6 ) : * *
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` ` ` py
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>> > def f ( x , y , ) :
. . . print ( x , y )
. . .
>> > def g ( x = 4 , y = 5 , ) :
. . . print ( x , y )
. . .
>> > def h ( x , * * kwargs , ) :
File " <stdin> " , line 1
def h ( x , * * kwargs , ) :
^
SyntaxError : invalid syntax
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>> > def h ( * args , ) :
File " <stdin> " , line 1
def h ( * args , ) :
^
SyntaxError : invalid syntax
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` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation:
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- Trailing comma is not always legal in formal parameters list of a Python function .
- In Python , the argument list is defined partially with leading commas and partially with trailing commas . This conflict causes situations where a comma is trapped in the middle , and no rule accepts it .
- * * Note : * * The trailing comma problem is [ fixed in Python 3.6 ] ( https : / / bugs . python . org / issue9232 ) . The remarks in [ this ] ( https : / / bugs . python . org / issue9232 #msg248399) post discuss in brief different usages of trailing commas in Python.
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- - -
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### ▶ Strings and the backslashes
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< ! - - Example ID : 6 ae622c3 - 6 d99 - 4041 - 9 b33 - 507 bd1a4407b - - - >
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* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
>> > print ( " \" " )
"
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>> > print ( r " \" " )
\"
>> > print ( r " \" )
File " <stdin> " , line 1
print ( r " \" )
^
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SyntaxError : EOL while scanning string literal
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>> > r ' \' ' == " \\ ' "
True
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` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation
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- In a usual python string , the backslash is used to escape characters that may have a special meaning ( like single - quote , double - quote , and the backslash itself ) .
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` ` ` py
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>> > " wt \" f "
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' wt " f '
` ` `
- In a raw string literal ( as indicated by the prefix ` r ` ) , the backslashes pass themselves as is along with the behavior of escaping the following character .
` ` ` py
>> > r ' wt \ " f ' == ' wt \\ " f '
True
>> > print ( repr ( r ' wt \ " f ' )
' wt \\ " f '
>> > print ( " \n " )
>> > print ( r " \\ n " )
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' \\ n '
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` ` `
- This means when a parser encounters a backslash in a raw string , it expects another character following it . And in our case ( ` print ( r " \" )`), the backslash escaped the trailing quote, leaving the parser without a terminating quote (hence the `SyntaxError`). That ' s why backslashes don ' t work at the end of a raw string.
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- - -
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### ▶ not knot!
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< ! - - Example ID : 7034 deb1 - 7443 - 417 d - 94 ee - 29 a800524de8 - - - >
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` ` ` py
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x = True
y = False
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
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>> > not x == y
True
>> > x == not y
File " <input> " , line 1
x == not y
^
SyntaxError : invalid syntax
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` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation:
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* Operator precedence affects how an expression is evaluated , and ` == ` operator has higher precedence than ` not ` operator in Python .
* So ` not x == y ` is equivalent to ` not ( x == y ) ` which is equivalent to ` not ( True == False ) ` finally evaluating to ` True ` .
* But ` x == not y ` raises a ` SyntaxError ` because it can be thought of being equivalent to ` ( x == not ) y ` and not ` x == ( not y ) ` which you might have expected at first sight .
* The parser expected the ` not ` token to be a part of the ` not in ` operator ( because both ` == ` and ` not in ` operators have the same precedence ) , but after not being able to find an ` in ` token following the ` not ` token , it raises a ` SyntaxError ` .
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- - -
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### ▶ Half triple-quoted strings
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< ! - - Example ID : c55da3e2 - 1034 - 43 b9 - abeb - a7a970a2ad9e - - - >
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* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
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>> > print ( ' wtfpython ' ' ' )
wtfpython
>> > print ( " wtfpython " " " )
wtfpython
>> > # The following statements raise `SyntaxError`
>> > # print('''wtfpython')
>> > # print("""wtfpython")
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File " <input> " , line 3
print ( """ wtfpython " )
^
SyntaxError : EOF while scanning triple - quoted string literal
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` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation:
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+ Python supports implicit [ string literal concatenation ] ( https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / reference / lexical_analysis . html #string-literal-concatenation), Example,
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` ` `
>> > print ( " wtf " " python " )
wtfpython
>> > print ( " wtf " " " ) # or "wtf"""
wtf
` ` `
+ ` ''' ` and ` " " " ` are also string delimiters in Python which causes a SyntaxError because the Python interpreter was expecting a terminating triple quote as delimiter while scanning the currently encountered triple quoted string literal.
- - -
### ▶ What's wrong with booleans?
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< ! - - Example ID : 0 bba5fa7 - 9e6 d - 4 cd2 - 8 b94 - 952 d061af5dd - - - >
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1 \.
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` ` ` py
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# A simple example to count the number of booleans and
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# integers in an iterable of mixed data types.
mixed_list = [ False , 1.0 , " some_string " , 3 , True , [ ] , False ]
integers_found_so_far = 0
booleans_found_so_far = 0
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for item in mixed_list :
if isinstance ( item , int ) :
integers_found_so_far + = 1
elif isinstance ( item , bool ) :
booleans_found_so_far + = 1
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > integers_found_so_far
4
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>> > booleans_found_so_far
0
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` ` `
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2 \.
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` ` ` py
>> > some_bool = True
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>> > " wtf " * some_bool
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' wtf '
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>> > some_bool = False
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>> > " wtf " * some_bool
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' '
` ` `
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3 \.
` ` ` py
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def tell_truth ( ) :
True = False
if True == False :
print ( " I have lost faith in truth! " )
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` ` `
* * Output ( < 3. x ) : * *
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` ` ` py
>> > tell_truth ( )
I have lost faith in truth !
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` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation:
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* ` bool ` is a subclass of ` int ` in Python
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` ` ` py
>> > issubclass ( bool , int )
True
>> > issubclass ( int , bool )
False
` ` `
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* And thus , ` True ` and ` False ` are instances of ` int `
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` ` ` py
>> > isinstance ( True , int )
True
>> > isinstance ( False , int )
True
` ` `
* The integer value of ` True ` is ` 1 ` and that of ` False ` is ` 0 ` .
` ` ` py
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>> > int ( True )
1
>> > int ( False )
0
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` ` `
* See this StackOverflow [ answer ] ( https : / / stackoverflow . com / a / 8169049 / 4354153 ) for the rationale behind it .
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* Initially , Python used to have no ` bool ` type ( people used 0 for false and non - zero value like 1 for true ) . ` True ` , ` False ` , and a ` bool ` type was added in 2. x versions , but , for backward compatibility , ` True ` and ` False ` couldn ' t be made constants. They just were built-in variables, and it was possible to reassign them
* Python 3 was backward - incompatible , the issue was finally fixed , and thus the last snippet won ' t work with Python 3.x!
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- - -
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### ▶ Class attributes and instance attributes
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< ! - - Example ID : 6 f332208 - 33 bd - 482 d - 8106 - 42863 b739ed9 - - - >
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1 \.
` ` ` py
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class A :
x = 1
class B ( A ) :
pass
class C ( A ) :
pass
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` ` `
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* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
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>> > A . x , B . x , C . x
( 1 , 1 , 1 )
>> > B . x = 2
>> > A . x , B . x , C . x
( 1 , 2 , 1 )
>> > A . x = 3
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>> > A . x , B . x , C . x # C.x changed, but B.x didn't
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( 3 , 2 , 3 )
>> > a = A ( )
>> > a . x , A . x
( 3 , 3 )
>> > a . x + = 1
>> > a . x , A . x
( 4 , 3 )
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` ` `
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2 \.
` ` ` py
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class SomeClass :
some_var = 15
some_list = [ 5 ]
another_list = [ 5 ]
def __init__ ( self , x ) :
self . some_var = x + 1
self . some_list = self . some_list + [ x ]
self . another_list + = [ x ]
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
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>> > some_obj = SomeClass ( 420 )
>> > some_obj . some_list
[ 5 , 420 ]
>> > some_obj . another_list
[ 5 , 420 ]
>> > another_obj = SomeClass ( 111 )
>> > another_obj . some_list
[ 5 , 111 ]
>> > another_obj . another_list
[ 5 , 420 , 111 ]
>> > another_obj . another_list is SomeClass . another_list
True
>> > another_obj . another_list is some_obj . another_list
True
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` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
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* Class variables and variables in class instances are internally handled as dictionaries of a class object . If a variable name is not found in the dictionary of the current class , the parent classes are searched for it .
* The ` + = ` operator modifies the mutable object in - place without creating a new object . So changing the attribute of one instance affects the other instances and the class attribute as well .
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- - -
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### ▶ yielding None
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< ! - - Example ID : 5 a40c241 - 2 c30 - 40 d0 - 8 ba9 - cf7e097b3b53 - - - >
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` ` ` py
some_iterable = ( ' a ' , ' b ' )
def some_func ( val ) :
return " something "
` ` `
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* * Output ( < = 3.7 . x ) : * *
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` ` ` py
>> > [ x for x in some_iterable ]
[ ' a ' , ' b ' ]
>> > [ ( yield x ) for x in some_iterable ]
< generator object < listcomp > at 0x7f70b0a4ad58 >
>> > list ( [ ( yield x ) for x in some_iterable ] )
[ ' a ' , ' b ' ]
>> > list ( ( yield x ) for x in some_iterable )
[ ' a ' , None , ' b ' , None ]
>> > list ( some_func ( ( yield x ) ) for x in some_iterable )
[ ' a ' , ' something ' , ' b ' , ' something ' ]
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
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- This is a bug in CPython ' s handling of `yield` in generators and comprehensions.
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- Source and explanation can be found here : https : / / stackoverflow . com / questions / 32139885 / yield - in - list - comprehensions - and - generator - expressions
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- Related bug report : https : / / bugs . python . org / issue10544
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- Python 3.8 + no longer allows ` yield ` inside list comprehension and will throw a ` SyntaxError ` .
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- - -
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### ▶ Yielding from... return! *
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< ! - - Example ID : 5626 d8ef - 8802 - 49 c2 - adbc - 7 cda5c550816 - - - >
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1 \.
` ` ` py
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def some_func ( x ) :
if x == 3 :
return [ " wtf " ]
else :
yield from range ( x )
` ` `
* * Output ( > 3.3 ) : * *
` ` ` py
>> > list ( some_func ( 3 ) )
[ ]
` ` `
Where did the ` " wtf " ` go ? Is it due to some special effect of ` yield from ` ? Let ' s validate that,
2 \.
` ` ` py
def some_func ( x ) :
if x == 3 :
return [ " wtf " ]
else :
for i in range ( x ) :
yield i
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > list ( some_func ( 3 ) )
[ ]
` ` `
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The same result , this didn ' t work either.
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#### 💡 Explanation:
+ From Python 3.3 onwards , it became possible to use ` return ` statement with values inside generators ( See [ PEP380 ] ( https : / / www . python . org / dev / peps / pep - 0380 / ) ) . The [ official docs ] ( https : / / www . python . org / dev / peps / pep - 0380 / #enhancements-to-stopiteration) say that,
> " ... `return expr` in a generator causes `StopIteration(expr)` to be raised upon exit from the generator. "
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+ In the case of ` some_func ( 3 ) ` , ` StopIteration ` is raised at the beginning because of ` return ` statement . The ` StopIteration ` exception is automatically caught inside the ` list ( . . . ) ` wrapper and the ` for ` loop . Therefore , the above two snippets result in an empty list .
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+ To get ` [ " wtf " ] ` from the generator ` some_func ` we need to catch the ` StopIteration ` exception ,
` ` ` py
try :
next ( some_func ( 3 ) )
except StopIteration as e :
some_string = e . value
` ` `
` ` ` py
>> > some_string
[ " wtf " ]
` ` `
- - -
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### ▶ Nan-reflexivity *
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< ! - - Example ID : 59 bee91a - 36e0 - 47 a4 - 8 c7d - aa89bf1d3976 - - - >
1 \.
` ` ` py
a = float ( ' inf ' )
b = float ( ' nan ' )
c = float ( ' -iNf ' ) # These strings are case-insensitive
d = float ( ' nan ' )
` ` `
* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
>> > a
inf
>> > b
nan
>> > c
- inf
>> > float ( ' some_other_string ' )
ValueError : could not convert string to float : some_other_string
>> > a == - c # inf==inf
True
>> > None == None # None == None
True
>> > b == d # but nan!=nan
False
>> > 50 / a
0.0
>> > a / a
nan
>> > 23 + b
nan
` ` `
2 \.
` ` ` py
>> > x = float ( ' nan ' )
>> > y = x / x
>> > y is y # identity holds
True
>> > y == y # equality fails of y
False
>> > [ y ] == [ y ] # but the equality succeeds for the list containing y
True
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
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- ` ' inf ' ` and ` ' nan ' ` are special strings ( case - insensitive ) , which , when explicitly typecast - ed to ` float ` type , are used to represent mathematical " infinity " and " not a number " respectively .
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- Since according to IEEE standards ` NaN != NaN ` , obeying this rule breaks the reflexivity assumption of a collection element in Python i . e . if ` x ` is a part of a collection like ` list ` , the implementations like comparison are based on the assumption that ` x == x ` . Because of this assumption , the identity is compared first ( since it ' s faster) while comparing two elements, and the values are compared only when the identities mismatch. The following snippet will make things clearer,
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` ` ` py
>> > x = float ( ' nan ' )
>> > x == x , [ x ] == [ x ]
( False , True )
>> > y = float ( ' nan ' )
>> > y == y , [ y ] == [ y ]
( False , True )
>> > x == y , [ x ] == [ y ]
( False , False )
` ` `
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Since the identities of ` x ` and ` y ` are different , the values are considered , which are also different ; hence the comparison returns ` False ` this time .
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- Interesting read : [ Reflexivity , and other pillars of civilization ] ( https : / / bertrandmeyer . com / 2010 / 02 / 06 / reflexivity - and - other - pillars - of - civilization / )
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- - -
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### ▶ Mutating the immutable!
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< ! - - Example ID : 15 a9e782 - 1695 - 43 ea - 817 a - a9208f6bb33d - - - >
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This might seem trivial if you know how references work in Python .
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` ` ` py
some_tuple = ( " A " , " tuple " , " with " , " values " )
another_tuple = ( [ 1 , 2 ] , [ 3 , 4 ] , [ 5 , 6 ] )
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > some_tuple [ 2 ] = " change this "
TypeError : ' tuple ' object does not support item assignment
>> > another_tuple [ 2 ] . append ( 1000 ) #This throws no error
>> > another_tuple
( [ 1 , 2 ] , [ 3 , 4 ] , [ 5 , 6 , 1000 ] )
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>> > another_tuple [ 2 ] + = [ 99 , 999 ]
TypeError : ' tuple ' object does not support item assignment
>> > another_tuple
( [ 1 , 2 ] , [ 3 , 4 ] , [ 5 , 6 , 1000 , 99 , 999 ] )
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` ` `
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But I thought tuples were immutable . . .
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#### 💡 Explanation:
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* Quoting from https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / reference / datamodel . html
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> Immutable sequences
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An object of an immutable sequence type cannot change once it is created . ( If the object contains references to other objects , these other objects may be mutable and may be modified ; however , the collection of objects directly referenced by an immutable object cannot change . )
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* ` + = ` operator changes the list in - place . The item assignment doesn ' t work, but when the exception occurs, the item has already been changed in place.
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* There ' s also an explanation in [official Python FAQ](https://docs.python.org/3/faq/programming.html#why-does-a-tuple-i-item-raise-an-exception-when-the-addition-works).
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- - -
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### ▶ The disappearing variable from outer scope
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< ! - - Example ID : 7 f1e71b6 - cb3e - 44 fb - aa47 - 87 ef1b7decc8 - - - >
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` ` ` py
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e = 7
try :
raise Exception ( )
except Exception as e :
pass
` ` `
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* * Output ( Python 2. x ) : * *
` ` ` py
>> > print ( e )
# prints nothing
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` ` `
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* * Output ( Python 3. x ) : * *
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` ` ` py
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>> > print ( e )
NameError : name ' e ' is not defined
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` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation:
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* Source : https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / reference / compound_stmts . html #except
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When an exception has been assigned using ` as ` target , it is cleared at the end of the ` except ` clause . This is as if
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` ` ` py
except E as N :
foo
` ` `
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was translated into
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` ` ` py
except E as N :
try :
foo
finally :
del N
` ` `
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This means the exception must be assigned to a different name to be able to refer to it after the except clause . Exceptions are cleared because , with the traceback attached to them , they form a reference cycle with the stack frame , keeping all locals in that frame alive until the next garbage collection occurs .
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* The clauses are not scoped in Python . Everything in the example is present in the same scope , and the variable ` e ` got removed due to the execution of the ` except ` clause . The same is not the case with functions that have their separate inner - scopes . The example below illustrates this :
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` ` ` py
def f ( x ) :
del ( x )
print ( x )
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x = 5
y = [ 5 , 4 , 3 ]
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > f ( x )
UnboundLocalError : local variable ' x ' referenced before assignment
>> > f ( y )
UnboundLocalError : local variable ' x ' referenced before assignment
>> > x
5
>> > y
[ 5 , 4 , 3 ]
` ` `
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* In Python 2. x , the variable name ` e ` gets assigned to ` Exception ( ) ` instance , so when you try to print , it prints nothing .
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* * Output ( Python 2. x ) : * *
` ` ` py
>> > e
Exception ( )
>> > print e
# Nothing is printed!
` ` `
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- - -
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### ▶ The mysterious key type conversion
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< ! - - Example ID : 00 f42dd0 - b9ef - 408 d - 9e39 - 1 bc209ce3f36 - - - >
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` ` ` py
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class SomeClass ( str ) :
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pass
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some_dict = { ' s ' : 42 }
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
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>> > type ( list ( some_dict . keys ( ) ) [ 0 ] )
str
>> > s = SomeClass ( ' s ' )
>> > some_dict [ s ] = 40
>> > some_dict # expected: Two different keys-value pairs
{ ' s ' : 40 }
>> > type ( list ( some_dict . keys ( ) ) [ 0 ] )
str
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` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation:
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* Both the object ` s ` and the string ` " s " ` hash to the same value because ` SomeClass ` inherits the ` __hash__ ` method of ` str ` class .
* ` SomeClass ( " s " ) == " s " ` evaluates to ` True ` because ` SomeClass ` also inherits ` __eq__ ` method from ` str ` class .
* Since both the objects hash to the same value and are equal , they are represented by the same key in the dictionary .
* For the desired behavior , we can redefine the ` __eq__ ` method in ` SomeClass `
` ` ` py
class SomeClass ( str ) :
def __eq__ ( self , other ) :
return (
type ( self ) is SomeClass
and type ( other ) is SomeClass
and super ( ) . __eq__ ( other )
)
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# When we define a custom __eq__, Python stops automatically inheriting the
# __hash__ method, so we need to define it as well
__hash__ = str . __hash__
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some_dict = { ' s ' : 42 }
` ` `
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* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > s = SomeClass ( ' s ' )
>> > some_dict [ s ] = 40
>> > some_dict
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{ ' s ' : 40 , ' s ' : 42 }
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>> > keys = list ( some_dict . keys ( ) )
>> > type ( keys [ 0 ] ) , type ( keys [ 1 ] )
( __main__ . SomeClass , str )
` ` `
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- - -
### ▶ Let's see if you can guess this?
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< ! - - Example ID : 81 aa9fbe - bd63 - 4283 - b56d - 6 fdd14c9105e - - - >
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` ` ` py
a , b = a [ b ] = { } , 5
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` ` `
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* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
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>> > a
{ 5 : ( { . . . } , 5 ) }
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` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation:
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* According to [ Python language reference ] ( https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / reference / simple_stmts . html #assignment-statements), assignment statements have the form
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` ` `
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( target_list " = " ) + ( expression_list | yield_expression )
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` ` `
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and
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> An assignment statement evaluates the expression list ( remember that this can be a single expression or a comma - separated list , the latter yielding a tuple ) and assigns the single resulting object to each of the target lists , from left to right .
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* The ` + ` in ` ( target_list " = " ) + ` means there can be * * one or more * * target lists . In this case , target lists are ` a , b ` and ` a [ b ] ` ( note the expression list is exactly one , which in our case is ` { } , 5 ` ) .
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* After the expression list is evaluated , its value is unpacked to the target lists from * * left to right * * . So , in our case , first the ` { } , 5 ` tuple is unpacked to ` a , b ` and we now have ` a = { } ` and ` b = 5 ` .
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* ` a ` is now assigned to ` { } ` , which is a mutable object .
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* The second target list is ` a [ b ] ` ( you may expect this to throw an error because both ` a ` and ` b ` have not been defined in the statements before . But remember , we just assigned ` a ` to ` { } ` and ` b ` to ` 5 ` ) .
* Now , we are setting the key ` 5 ` in the dictionary to the tuple ` ( { } , 5 ) ` creating a circular reference ( the ` { . . . } ` in the output refers to the same object that ` a ` is already referencing ) . Another simpler example of circular reference could be
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` ` ` py
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>> > some_list = some_list [ 0 ] = [ 0 ]
>> > some_list
[ [ . . . ] ]
>> > some_list [ 0 ]
[ [ . . . ] ]
>> > some_list is some_list [ 0 ]
True
>> > some_list [ 0 ] [ 0 ] [ 0 ] [ 0 ] [ 0 ] [ 0 ] == some_list
True
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` ` `
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Similar is the case in our example ( ` a [ b ] [ 0 ] ` is the same object as ` a ` )
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* So to sum it up , you can break the example down to
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` ` ` py
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a , b = { } , 5
a [ b ] = a , b
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` ` `
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And the circular reference can be justified by the fact that ` a [ b ] [ 0 ] ` is the same object as ` a `
` ` ` py
>> > a [ b ] [ 0 ] is a
True
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` ` `
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- - -
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- - -
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## Section: Slippery Slopes
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### ▶ Modifying a dictionary while iterating over it
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< ! - - Example ID : b4e5cdfb - c3a8 - 4112 - bd38 - e2356d801c41 - - - >
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` ` ` py
x = { 0 : None }
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for i in x :
del x [ i ]
x [ i + 1 ] = None
print ( i )
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` ` `
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* * Output ( Python 2.7 - Python 3.5 ) : * *
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` ` `
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0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
` ` `
Yes , it runs for exactly * * eight * * times and stops .
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#### 💡 Explanation:
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* Iteration over a dictionary that you edit at the same time is not supported .
* It runs eight times because that ' s the point at which the dictionary resizes to hold more keys (we have eight deletion entries, so a resize is needed). This is actually an implementation detail.
* How deleted keys are handled and when the resize occurs might be different for different Python implementations .
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* So for Python versions other than Python 2.7 - Python 3.5 , the count might be different from 8 ( but whatever the count is , it ' s going to be the same every time you run it). You can find some discussion around this [here](https://github.com/satwikkansal/wtfpython/issues/53) or in [this](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/44763802/bug-in-python-dict) StackOverflow thread.
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* Python 3.7 .6 onwards , you ' ll see `RuntimeError: dictionary keys changed during iteration` exception if you try to do this.
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- - -
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### ▶ Stubborn `del` operation
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< ! - - Example ID : 777 ed4fd - 3 a2d - 466 f - 95e7 - c4058e61d78e - - - >
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< ! - - read - only - - >
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` ` ` py
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class SomeClass :
def __del__ ( self ) :
print ( " Deleted! " )
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` ` `
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* * Output : * *
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1 \.
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` ` ` py
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>> > x = SomeClass ( )
>> > y = x
>> > del x # this should print "Deleted!"
>> > del y
Deleted !
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` ` `
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Phew , deleted at last . You might have guessed what saved ` __del__ ` from being called in our first attempt to delete ` x ` . Let ' s add more twists to the example.
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2 \.
` ` ` py
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>> > x = SomeClass ( )
>> > y = x
>> > del x
>> > y # check if y exists
< __main__ . SomeClass instance at 0x7f98a1a67fc8 >
>> > del y # Like previously, this should print "Deleted!"
>> > globals ( ) # oh, it didn't. Let's check all our global variables and confirm
Deleted !
{ ' __builtins__ ' : < module ' __builtin__ ' ( built - in ) > , ' SomeClass ' : < class __main__ . SomeClass at 0x7f98a1a5f668 > , ' __package__ ' : None , ' __name__ ' : ' __main__ ' , ' __doc__ ' : None }
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` ` `
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Okay , now it ' s deleted :confused:
#### 💡 Explanation:
+ ` del x ` doesn ’ t directly call ` x . __del__ ( ) ` .
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+ When ` del x ` is encountered , Python deletes the name ` x ` from current scope and decrements by 1 the reference count of the object ` x ` referenced . ` __del__ ( ) ` is called only when the object ' s reference count reaches zero.
+ In the second output snippet , ` __del__ ( ) ` was not called because the previous statement ( ` >> > y ` ) in the interactive interpreter created another reference to the same object ( specifically , the ` _ ` magic variable which references the result value of the last non ` None ` expression on the REPL ) , thus preventing the reference count from reaching zero when ` del y ` was encountered .
+ Calling ` globals ` ( or really , executing anything that will have a non ` None ` result ) caused ` _ ` to reference the new result , dropping the existing reference . Now the reference count reached 0 and we can see " Deleted! " being printed ( finally ! ) .
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- - -
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### ▶ The out of scope variable
< ! - - Example ID : 75 c03015 - 7 be9 - 4289 - 9e22 - 4 f5fdda056f7 - - - >
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1 \.
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` ` ` py
a = 1
def some_func ( ) :
return a
def another_func ( ) :
a + = 1
return a
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` ` `
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2 \.
` ` ` py
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def some_closure_func ( ) :
a = 1
def some_inner_func ( ) :
return a
return some_inner_func ( )
def another_closure_func ( ) :
a = 1
def another_inner_func ( ) :
a + = 1
return a
return another_inner_func ( )
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > some_func ( )
1
>> > another_func ( )
UnboundLocalError : local variable ' a ' referenced before assignment
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>> > some_closure_func ( )
1
>> > another_closure_func ( )
UnboundLocalError : local variable ' a ' referenced before assignment
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` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
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* When you make an assignment to a variable in scope , it becomes local to that scope . So ` a ` becomes local to the scope of ` another_func ` , but it has not been initialized previously in the same scope , which throws an error .
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* To modify the outer scope variable ` a ` in ` another_func ` , we have to use the ` global ` keyword .
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` ` ` py
def another_func ( )
global a
a + = 1
return a
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > another_func ( )
2
` ` `
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* In ` another_closure_func ` , ` a ` becomes local to the scope of ` another_inner_func ` , but it has not been initialized previously in the same scope , which is why it throws an error .
* To modify the outer scope variable ` a ` in ` another_inner_func ` , use the ` nonlocal ` keyword . The nonlocal statement is used to refer to variables defined in the nearest outer ( excluding the global ) scope .
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` ` ` py
def another_func ( ) :
a = 1
def another_inner_func ( ) :
nonlocal a
a + = 1
return a
return another_inner_func ( )
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > another_func ( )
2
` ` `
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* The keywords ` global ` and ` nonlocal ` tell the python interpreter to not declare new variables and look them up in the corresponding outer scopes .
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* Read [ this ] ( https : / / sebastianraschka . com / Articles / 2014 _python_scope_and_namespaces . html ) short but an awesome guide to learn more about how namespaces and scope resolution works in Python .
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- - -
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### ▶ Deleting a list item while iterating
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< ! - - Example ID : 4 cc52d4e - d42b - 4e09 - b25f - fbf5699b7d4e - - - >
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` ` ` py
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list_1 = [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]
list_2 = [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]
list_3 = [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]
list_4 = [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]
for idx , item in enumerate ( list_1 ) :
del item
for idx , item in enumerate ( list_2 ) :
list_2 . remove ( item )
for idx , item in enumerate ( list_3 [ : ] ) :
list_3 . remove ( item )
for idx , item in enumerate ( list_4 ) :
list_4 . pop ( idx )
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` ` `
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* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
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>> > list_1
[ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]
>> > list_2
[ 2 , 4 ]
>> > list_3
[ ]
>> > list_4
[ 2 , 4 ]
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` ` `
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Can you guess why the output is ` [ 2 , 4 ] ` ?
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#### 💡 Explanation:
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* It ' s never a good idea to change the object you ' re iterating over . The correct way to do so is to iterate over a copy of the object instead , and ` list_3 [ : ] ` does just that .
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` ` ` py
>> > some_list = [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]
>> > id ( some_list )
139798789457608
>> > id ( some_list [ : ] ) # Notice that python creates new object for sliced list.
139798779601192
` ` `
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* * Difference between ` del ` , ` remove ` , and ` pop ` : * *
* ` del var_name ` just removes the binding of the ` var_name ` from the local or global namespace ( That ' s why the `list_1` is unaffected).
* ` remove ` removes the first matching value , not a specific index , raises ` ValueError ` if the value is not found .
* ` pop ` removes the element at a specific index and returns it , raises ` IndexError ` if an invalid index is specified .
* * Why the output is ` [ 2 , 4 ] ` ? * *
- The list iteration is done index by index , and when we remove ` 1 ` from ` list_2 ` or ` list_4 ` , the contents of the lists are now ` [ 2 , 3 , 4 ] ` . The remaining elements are shifted down , i . e . , ` 2 ` is at index 0 , and ` 3 ` is at index 1. Since the next iteration is going to look at index 1 ( which is the ` 3 ` ) , the ` 2 ` gets skipped entirely . A similar thing will happen with every alternate element in the list sequence .
* Refer to this StackOverflow [ thread ] ( https : / / stackoverflow . com / questions / 45946228 / what - happens - when - you - try - to - delete - a - list - element - while - iterating - over - it ) explaining the example
* See also this nice StackOverflow [ thread ] ( https : / / stackoverflow . com / questions / 45877614 / how - to - change - all - the - dictionary - keys - in - a - for - loop - with - d - items ) for a similar example related to dictionaries in Python .
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- - -
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### ▶ Lossy zip of iterators *
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< ! - - Example ID : c28ed154 - e59f - 4070 - 8 eb6 - 8967 a4acac6d - - - >
` ` ` py
>> > numbers = list ( range ( 7 ) )
>> > numbers
[ 0 , 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 ]
>> > first_three , remaining = numbers [ : 3 ] , numbers [ 3 : ]
>> > first_three , remaining
( [ 0 , 1 , 2 ] , [ 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 ] )
>> > numbers_iter = iter ( numbers )
>> > list ( zip ( numbers_iter , first_three ) )
[ ( 0 , 0 ) , ( 1 , 1 ) , ( 2 , 2 ) ]
# so far so good, let's zip the remaining
>> > list ( zip ( numbers_iter , remaining ) )
[ ( 4 , 3 ) , ( 5 , 4 ) , ( 6 , 5 ) ]
` ` `
Where did element ` 3 ` go from the ` numbers ` list ?
#### 💡 Explanation:
- From Python [ docs ] ( https : / / docs . python . org / 3.3 / library / functions . html #zip), here's an approximate implementation of zip function,
` ` ` py
def zip ( * iterables ) :
sentinel = object ( )
iterators = [ iter ( it ) for it in iterables ]
while iterators :
result = [ ]
for it in iterators :
elem = next ( it , sentinel )
if elem is sentinel : return
result . append ( elem )
yield tuple ( result )
` ` `
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- So the function takes in arbitrary number of iterable objects , adds each of their items to the ` result ` list by calling the ` next ` function on them , and stops whenever any of the iterable is exhausted .
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- The caveat here is when any iterable is exhausted , the existing elements in the ` result ` list are discarded . That ' s what happened with `3` in the `numbers_iter`.
- The correct way to do the above using ` zip ` would be ,
` ` ` py
>> > numbers = list ( range ( 7 ) )
>> > numbers_iter = iter ( numbers )
>> > list ( zip ( first_three , numbers_iter ) )
[ ( 0 , 0 ) , ( 1 , 1 ) , ( 2 , 2 ) ]
>> > list ( zip ( remaining , numbers_iter ) )
[ ( 3 , 3 ) , ( 4 , 4 ) , ( 5 , 5 ) , ( 6 , 6 ) ]
` ` `
The first argument of zip should be the one with fewest elements .
- - -
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### ▶ Loop variables leaking out!
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< ! - - Example ID : ccec7bf6 - 7679 - 4963 - 907 a - 1 cd8587be9ea - - - >
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1 \.
` ` ` py
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for x in range ( 7 ) :
if x == 6 :
print ( x , ' : for x inside loop ' )
print ( x , ' : x in global ' )
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
6 : for x inside loop
6 : x in global
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` ` `
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But ` x ` was never defined outside the scope of for loop . . .
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2 \.
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` ` ` py
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# This time let's initialize x first
x = - 1
for x in range ( 7 ) :
if x == 6 :
print ( x , ' : for x inside loop ' )
print ( x , ' : x in global ' )
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` ` `
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* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
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6 : for x inside loop
6 : x in global
` ` `
3 \.
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* * Output ( Python 2. x ) : * *
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` ` ` py
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>> > x = 1
>> > print ( [ x for x in range ( 5 ) ] )
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[ 0 , 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]
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>> > print ( x )
4
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` ` `
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* * Output ( Python 3. x ) : * *
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` ` ` py
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>> > x = 1
>> > print ( [ x for x in range ( 5 ) ] )
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[ 0 , 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]
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>> > print ( x )
1
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` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation:
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- In Python , for - loops use the scope they exist in and leave their defined loop - variable behind . This also applies if we explicitly defined the for - loop variable in the global namespace before . In this case , it will rebind the existing variable .
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- The differences in the output of Python 2. x and Python 3. x interpreters for list comprehension example can be explained by following change documented in [ What ’ s New In Python 3.0 ] ( https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / whatsnew / 3.0 . html ) changelog :
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> " List comprehensions no longer support the syntactic form `[... for var in item1, item2, ...]`. Use `[... for var in (item1, item2, ...)]` instead. Also, note that list comprehensions have different semantics: they are closer to syntactic sugar for a generator expression inside a `list()` constructor, and in particular, the loop control variables are no longer leaked into the surrounding scope. "
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- - -
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### ▶ Beware of default mutable arguments!
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< ! - - Example ID : 7 d42dade - e20d - 4 a7b - 9 ed7 - 16 fb58505fe9 - - - >
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` ` ` py
def some_func ( default_arg = [ ] ) :
default_arg . append ( " some_string " )
return default_arg
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
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>> > some_func ( )
[ ' some_string ' ]
>> > some_func ( )
[ ' some_string ' , ' some_string ' ]
>> > some_func ( [ ] )
[ ' some_string ' ]
>> > some_func ( )
[ ' some_string ' , ' some_string ' , ' some_string ' ]
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` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
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- The default mutable arguments of functions in Python aren ' t really initialized every time you call the function. Instead, the recently assigned value to them is used as the default value. When we explicitly passed `[]` to `some_func` as the argument, the default value of the `default_arg` variable was not used, so the function returned as expected.
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` ` ` py
def some_func ( default_arg = [ ] ) :
default_arg . append ( " some_string " )
return default_arg
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > some_func . __defaults__ #This will show the default argument values for the function
( [ ] , )
>> > some_func ( )
>> > some_func . __defaults__
( [ ' some_string ' ] , )
>> > some_func ( )
>> > some_func . __defaults__
( [ ' some_string ' , ' some_string ' ] , )
>> > some_func ( [ ] )
>> > some_func . __defaults__
( [ ' some_string ' , ' some_string ' ] , )
` ` `
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- A common practice to avoid bugs due to mutable arguments is to assign ` None ` as the default value and later check if any value is passed to the function corresponding to that argument . Example :
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` ` ` py
def some_func ( default_arg = None ) :
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if default_arg is None :
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default_arg = [ ]
default_arg . append ( " some_string " )
return default_arg
` ` `
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- - -
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### ▶ Catching the Exceptions
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< ! - - Example ID : b5ca5e6a - 47 b9 - 4 f69 - 9375 - cda0f8c6755d - - - >
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` ` ` py
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some_list = [ 1 , 2 , 3 ]
try :
# This should raise an ``IndexError``
print ( some_list [ 4 ] )
except IndexError , ValueError :
print ( " Caught! " )
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try :
# This should raise a ``ValueError``
some_list . remove ( 4 )
except IndexError , ValueError :
print ( " Caught again! " )
` ` `
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* * Output ( Python 2. x ) : * *
` ` ` py
Caught !
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ValueError : list . remove ( x ) : x not in list
` ` `
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* * Output ( Python 3. x ) : * *
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` ` ` py
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File " <input> " , line 3
except IndexError , ValueError :
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^
SyntaxError : invalid syntax
` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation
* To add multiple Exceptions to the except clause , you need to pass them as parenthesized tuple as the first argument . The second argument is an optional name , which when supplied will bind the Exception instance that has been raised . Example ,
` ` ` py
some_list = [ 1 , 2 , 3 ]
try :
# This should raise a ``ValueError``
some_list . remove ( 4 )
except ( IndexError , ValueError ) , e :
print ( " Caught again! " )
print ( e )
` ` `
* * Output ( Python 2. x ) : * *
` ` `
Caught again !
list . remove ( x ) : x not in list
` ` `
* * Output ( Python 3. x ) : * *
` ` ` py
File " <input> " , line 4
except ( IndexError , ValueError ) , e :
^
IndentationError : unindent does not match any outer indentation level
` ` `
* Separating the exception from the variable with a comma is deprecated and does not work in Python 3 ; the correct way is to use ` as ` . Example ,
` ` ` py
some_list = [ 1 , 2 , 3 ]
try :
some_list . remove ( 4 )
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except ( IndexError , ValueError ) as e :
print ( " Caught again! " )
print ( e )
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` `
Caught again !
list . remove ( x ) : x not in list
` ` `
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- - -
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### ▶ Same operands, different story!
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< ! - - Example ID : ca052cdf - dd2d - 4105 - b936 - 65 c28adc18a0 - - - >
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1 \.
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` ` ` py
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a = [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]
b = a
a = a + [ 5 , 6 , 7 , 8 ]
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` ` `
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* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
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>> > a
[ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 , 7 , 8 ]
>> > b
[ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]
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` ` `
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2 \.
` ` ` py
a = [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]
b = a
a + = [ 5 , 6 , 7 , 8 ]
` ` `
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* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
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>> > a
[ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 , 7 , 8 ]
>> > b
[ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 , 7 , 8 ]
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` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
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* ` a + = b ` doesn ' t always behave the same way as `a = a + b`. Classes *may* implement the *`op=`* operators differently, and lists do this.
* The expression ` a = a + [ 5 , 6 , 7 , 8 ] ` generates a new list and sets ` a ` ' s reference to that new list, leaving `b` unchanged.
* The expression ` a + = [ 5 , 6 , 7 , 8 ] ` is actually mapped to an " extend " function that operates on the list such that ` a ` and ` b ` still point to the same list that has been modified in - place .
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- - -
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### ▶ Name resolution ignoring class scope
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< ! - - Example ID : 03 f73d96 - 151 c - 4929 - b0a8 - f74430788324 - - - >
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1 \.
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` ` ` py
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x = 5
class SomeClass :
x = 17
y = ( x for i in range ( 10 ) )
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
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>> > list ( SomeClass . y ) [ 0 ]
5
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` ` `
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2 \.
` ` ` py
x = 5
class SomeClass :
x = 17
y = [ x for i in range ( 10 ) ]
` ` `
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* * Output ( Python 2. x ) : * *
` ` ` py
>> > SomeClass . y [ 0 ]
17
` ` `
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* * Output ( Python 3. x ) : * *
` ` ` py
>> > SomeClass . y [ 0 ]
5
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation
- Scopes nested inside class definition ignore names bound at the class level .
- A generator expression has its own scope .
- Starting from Python 3. X , list comprehensions also have their own scope .
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- - -
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### ▶ Needles in a Haystack *
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< ! - - Example ID : 52 a199b1 - 989 a - 4 b28 - 8910 - dff562cebba9 - - - >
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I haven ' t met even a single experience Pythonist till date who has not come across one or more of the following scenarios,
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1 \.
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` ` ` py
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x , y = ( 0 , 1 ) if True else None , None
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
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>> > x , y # expected (0, 1)
( ( 0 , 1 ) , None )
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` ` `
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2 \.
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` ` ` py
t = ( ' one ' , ' two ' )
for i in t :
print ( i )
t = ( ' one ' )
for i in t :
print ( i )
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t = ( )
print ( t )
` ` `
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* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
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one
two
o
n
e
tuple ( )
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` ` `
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3 \.
` ` `
ten_words_list = [
" some " ,
" very " ,
" big " ,
" list " ,
" that "
" consists " ,
" of " ,
" exactly " ,
" ten " ,
" words "
]
` ` `
* * Output * *
` ` ` py
>> > len ( ten_words_list )
9
` ` `
4 \. Not asserting strongly enough
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` ` ` py
a = " python "
b = " javascript "
` ` `
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* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
# An assert statement with an assertion failure message.
>> > assert ( a == b , " Both languages are different " )
# No AssertionError is raised
` ` `
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5 \.
` ` ` py
some_list = [ 1 , 2 , 3 ]
some_dict = {
" key_1 " : 1 ,
" key_2 " : 2 ,
" key_3 " : 3
}
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some_list = some_list . append ( 4 )
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some_dict = some_dict . update ( { " key_4 " : 4 } )
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > print ( some_list )
None
>> > print ( some_dict )
None
` ` `
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6 \.
` ` ` py
def some_recursive_func ( a ) :
if a [ 0 ] == 0 :
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return
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a [ 0 ] - = 1
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some_recursive_func ( a )
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return a
def similar_recursive_func ( a ) :
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if a == 0 :
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return a
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a - = 1
similar_recursive_func ( a )
return a
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > some_recursive_func ( [ 5 , 0 ] )
[ 0 , 0 ]
>> > similar_recursive_func ( 5 )
4
` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation:
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* For 1 , the correct statement for expected behavior is ` x , y = ( 0 , 1 ) if True else ( None , None ) ` .
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* For 2 , the correct statement for expected behavior is ` t = ( ' one ' , ) ` or ` t = ' one ' , ` ( missing comma ) otherwise the interpreter considers ` t ` to be a ` str ` and iterates over it character by character .
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* ` ( ) ` is a special token and denotes empty ` tuple ` .
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* In 3 , as you might have already figured out , there ' s a missing comma after 5th element (` " that " `) in the list. So by implicit string literal concatenation,
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` ` ` py
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>> > ten_words_list
[ ' some ' , ' very ' , ' big ' , ' list ' , ' thatconsists ' , ' of ' , ' exactly ' , ' ten ' , ' words ' ]
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` ` `
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* No ` AssertionError ` was raised in 4 th snippet because instead of asserting the individual expression ` a == b ` , we ' re asserting entire tuple. The following snippet will clear things up,
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` ` ` py
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>> > a = " python "
>> > b = " javascript "
>> > assert a == b
Traceback ( most recent call last ) :
File " <stdin> " , line 1 , in < module >
AssertionError
>> > assert ( a == b , " Values are not equal " )
< stdin > : 1 : SyntaxWarning : assertion is always true , perhaps remove parentheses ?
>> > assert a == b , " Values are not equal "
Traceback ( most recent call last ) :
File " <stdin> " , line 1 , in < module >
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AssertionError : Values are not equal
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` ` `
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* As for the fifth snippet , most methods that modify the items of sequence / mapping objects like ` list . append ` , ` dict . update ` , ` list . sort ` , etc . modify the objects in - place and return ` None ` . The rationale behind this is to improve performance by avoiding making a copy of the object if the operation can be done in - place ( Referred from [ here ] ( https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / faq / design . html #why-doesn-t-list-sort-return-the-sorted-list)).
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* Last one should be fairly obvious , mutable object ( like ` list ` ) can be altered in the function , and the reassignation of an immutable ( ` a - = 1 ` ) is not an alteration of the value .
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* Being aware of these nitpicks can save you hours of debugging effort in the long run .
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- - -
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### ▶ Splitsies *
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< ! - - Example ID : ec3168ba - a81a - 4482 - afb0 - 691 f1cc8d65a - - - >
` ` ` py
>> > ' a ' . split ( )
[ ' a ' ]
# is same as
>> > ' a ' . split ( ' ' )
[ ' a ' ]
# but
>> > len ( ' ' . split ( ) )
0
# isn't the same as
>> > len ( ' ' . split ( ' ' ) )
1
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
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- It might appear at first that the default separator for split is a single space ` ' ' ` , but as per the [ docs ] ( https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / library / stdtypes . html #str.split)
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> If sep is not specified or is ` None ` , a different splitting algorithm is applied : runs of consecutive whitespace are regarded as a single separator , and the result will contain no empty strings at the start or end if the string has leading or trailing whitespace . Consequently , splitting an empty string or a string consisting of just whitespace with a None separator returns ` [ ] ` .
> If sep is given , consecutive delimiters are not grouped together and are deemed to delimit empty strings ( for example , ` ' 1,,2 ' . split ( ' , ' ) ` returns ` [ ' 1 ' , ' ' , ' 2 ' ] ` ) . Splitting an empty string with a specified separator returns ` [ ' ' ] ` .
- Noticing how the leading and trailing whitespaces are handled in the following snippet will make things clear ,
` ` ` py
>> > ' a ' . split ( ' ' )
[ ' ' , ' a ' , ' ' ]
>> > ' a ' . split ( )
[ ' a ' ]
>> > ' ' . split ( ' ' )
[ ' ' ]
` ` `
- - -
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### ▶ Wild imports *
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< ! - - Example ID : 83 deb561 - bd55 - 4461 - bb5e - 77 dd7f411e1c - - - >
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< ! - - read - only - - >
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` ` ` py
# File: module.py
def some_weird_name_func_ ( ) :
print ( " works! " )
def _another_weird_name_func ( ) :
print ( " works! " )
` ` `
* * Output * *
` ` ` py
>> > from module import *
>> > some_weird_name_func_ ( )
" works! "
>> > _another_weird_name_func ( )
Traceback ( most recent call last ) :
File " <stdin> " , line 1 , in < module >
NameError : name ' _another_weird_name_func ' is not defined
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
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- It is often advisable to not use wildcard imports . The first obvious reason for this is , in wildcard imports , the names with a leading underscore don ' t get imported. This may lead to errors during runtime.
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- Had we used ` from . . . import a , b , c ` syntax , the above ` NameError ` wouldn ' t have occurred.
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` ` ` py
>> > from module import some_weird_name_func_ , _another_weird_name_func
>> > _another_weird_name_func ( )
works !
` ` `
- If you really want to use wildcard imports , then you ' d have to define the list `__all__` in your module that will contain a list of public objects that ' ll be available when we do wildcard imports .
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` ` ` py
__all__ = [ ' _another_weird_name_func ' ]
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def some_weird_name_func_ ( ) :
print ( " works! " )
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def _another_weird_name_func ( ) :
print ( " works! " )
` ` `
* * Output * *
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` ` ` py
>> > _another_weird_name_func ( )
" works! "
>> > some_weird_name_func_ ( )
Traceback ( most recent call last ) :
File " <stdin> " , line 1 , in < module >
NameError : name ' some_weird_name_func_ ' is not defined
` ` `
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- - -
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### ▶ All sorted? *
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< ! - - Example ID : e5ff1eaf - 8823 - 4738 - b4ce - b73f7c9d5511 - - >
` ` ` py
>> > x = 7 , 8 , 9
>> > sorted ( x ) == x
False
>> > sorted ( x ) == sorted ( x )
True
>> > y = reversed ( x )
>> > sorted ( y ) == sorted ( y )
False
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
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- The ` sorted ` method always returns a list , and comparing lists and tuples always returns ` False ` in Python .
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- ` ` ` py
>> > [ ] == tuple ( )
False
>> > x = 7 , 8 , 9
>> > type ( x ) , type ( sorted ( x ) )
( tuple , list )
` ` `
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- Unlike ` sorted ` , the ` reversed ` method returns an iterator . Why ? Because sorting requires the iterator to be either modified in - place or use an extra container ( a list ) , whereas reversing can simply work by iterating from the last index to the first .
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- So during comparison ` sorted ( y ) == sorted ( y ) ` , the first call to ` sorted ( ) ` will consume the iterator ` y ` , and the next call will just return an empty list .
` ` ` py
>> > x = 7 , 8 , 9
>> > y = reversed ( x )
>> > sorted ( y ) , sorted ( y )
( [ 7 , 8 , 9 ] , [ ] )
` ` `
- - -
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### ▶ Midnight time doesn't exist?
< ! - - Example ID : 1 bce8294 - 5619 - 4 d70 - 8 ce3 - fe0bade690d1 - - - >
` ` ` py
from datetime import datetime
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midnight = datetime ( 2018 , 1 , 1 , 0 , 0 )
midnight_time = midnight . time ( )
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noon = datetime ( 2018 , 1 , 1 , 12 , 0 )
noon_time = noon . time ( )
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if midnight_time :
print ( " Time at midnight is " , midnight_time )
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if noon_time :
print ( " Time at noon is " , noon_time )
` ` `
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* * Output ( < 3.5 ) : * *
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` ` ` py
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( ' Time at noon is ' , datetime . time ( 12 , 0 ) )
` ` `
The midnight time is not printed .
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#### 💡 Explanation:
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Before Python 3.5 , the boolean value for ` datetime . time ` object was considered to be ` False ` if it represented midnight in UTC . It is error - prone when using the ` if obj : ` syntax to check if the ` obj ` is null or some equivalent of " empty. "
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- - -
- - -
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## Section: The Hidden treasures!
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This section contains a few lesser - known and interesting things about Python that most beginners like me are unaware of ( well , not anymore ) .
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### ▶ Okay Python, Can you make me fly?
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< ! - - Example ID : a92f3645 - 1899 - 4 d50 - 9721 - 0031 be4aec3f - - - >
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Well , here you go
` ` ` py
import antigravity
` ` `
* * Output : * *
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Sshh . . . It ' s a super-secret.
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#### 💡 Explanation:
+ ` antigravity ` module is one of the few easter eggs released by Python developers .
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+ ` import antigravity ` opens up a web browser pointing to the [ classic XKCD comic ] ( https : / / xkcd . com / 353 / ) about Python .
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+ Well , there ' s more to it. There ' s * * another easter egg inside the easter egg * * . If you look at the [ code ] ( https : / / github . com / python / cpython / blob / master / Lib / antigravity . py #L7-L17), there's a function defined that purports to implement the [XKCD's geohashing algorithm](https://xkcd.com/426/).
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- - -
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### ▶ `goto`, but why?
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< ! - - Example ID : 2 aff961e - 7 fa5 - 4986 - a18a - 9e5894 bd89fe - - - >
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` ` ` py
from goto import goto , label
for i in range ( 9 ) :
for j in range ( 9 ) :
for k in range ( 9 ) :
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print ( " I am trapped, please rescue! " )
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if k == 2 :
goto . breakout # breaking out from a deeply nested loop
label . breakout
print ( " Freedom! " )
` ` `
* * Output ( Python 2.3 ) : * *
` ` ` py
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I am trapped , please rescue !
I am trapped , please rescue !
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Freedom !
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
- A working version of ` goto ` in Python was [ announced ] ( https : / / mail . python . org / pipermail / python - announce - list / 2004 - April / 002982. html ) as an April Fool ' s joke on 1st April 2004.
- Current versions of Python do not have this module .
- Although it works , but please don ' t use it. Here ' s the [ reason ] ( https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / faq / design . html #why-is-there-no-goto) to why `goto` is not present in Python.
- - -
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### ▶ Brace yourself!
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< ! - - Example ID : 5 c0c75f2 - ddd9 - 4 da3 - ba49 - c4be7ec39acf - - - >
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If you are one of the people who doesn ' t like using whitespace in Python to denote scopes, you can use the C-style {} by importing,
` ` ` py
from __future__ import braces
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
File " some_file.py " , line 1
from __future__ import braces
SyntaxError : not a chance
` ` `
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Braces ? No way ! If you think that ' s disappointing, use Java. Okay, another surprising thing, can you find where ' s the ` SyntaxError ` raised in ` __future__ ` module [ code ] ( https : / / github . com / python / cpython / blob / master / Lib / __future__ . py ) ?
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#### 💡 Explanation:
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+ The ` __future__ ` module is normally used to provide features from future versions of Python . The " future " in this specific context is however , ironic .
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+ This is an easter egg concerned with the community ' s feelings on this issue.
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+ The code is actually present [ here ] ( https : / / github . com / python / cpython / blob / 025 eb98dc0c1dc27404df6c544fc2944e0fa9f3a / Python / future . c #L49) in `future.c` file.
+ When the CPython compiler encounters a [ future statement ] ( https : / / docs . python . org / 3.3 / reference / simple_stmts . html #future-statements), it first runs the appropriate code in `future.c` before treating it as a normal import statement.
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- - -
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### ▶ Let's meet Friendly Language Uncle For Life
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< ! - - Example ID : 6427 fae6 - e959 - 462 d - 85 da - ce4c94ce41be - - - >
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* * Output ( Python 3. x ) * *
` ` ` py
>> > from __future__ import barry_as_FLUFL
>> > " Ruby " != " Python " # there's no doubt about it
File " some_file.py " , line 1
" Ruby " != " Python "
^
SyntaxError : invalid syntax
>> > " Ruby " < > " Python "
True
` ` `
There we go .
#### 💡 Explanation:
- This is relevant to [ PEP - 401 ] ( https : / / www . python . org / dev / peps / pep - 0401 / ) released on April 1 , 2009 ( now you know , what it means ) .
- Quoting from the PEP - 401
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> Recognized that the != inequality operator in Python 3.0 was a horrible , finger - pain inducing mistake , the FLUFL reinstates the < > diamond operator as the sole spelling .
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- There were more things that Uncle Barry had to share in the PEP ; you can read them [ here ] ( https : / / www . python . org / dev / peps / pep - 0401 / ) .
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- It works well in an interactive environment , but it will raise a ` SyntaxError ` when you run via python file ( see this [ issue ] ( https : / / github . com / satwikkansal / wtfpython / issues / 94 ) ) . However , you can wrap the statement inside an ` eval ` or ` compile ` to get it working ,
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` ` ` py
from __future__ import barry_as_FLUFL
print ( eval ( ' " Ruby " <> " Python " ' ) )
` ` `
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- - -
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### ▶ Even Python understands that love is complicated
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< ! - - Example ID : b93cad9e - d341 - 45 d1 - 999 c - fcdce65bed25 - - - >
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` ` ` py
import this
` ` `
Wait , what ' s **this**? `this` is love :heart:
* * Output : * *
` ` `
The Zen of Python , by Tim Peters
Beautiful is better than ugly .
Explicit is better than implicit .
Simple is better than complex .
Complex is better than complicated .
Flat is better than nested .
Sparse is better than dense .
Readability counts .
Special cases aren ' t special enough to break the rules.
Although practicality beats purity .
Errors should never pass silently .
Unless explicitly silenced .
In the face of ambiguity , refuse the temptation to guess .
There should be one - - and preferably only one - - obvious way to do it .
Although that way may not be obvious at first unless you ' re Dutch.
Now is better than never .
Although never is often better than * right * now .
If the implementation is hard to explain , it ' s a bad idea.
If the implementation is easy to explain , it may be a good idea .
Namespaces are one honking great idea - - let ' s do more of those!
` ` `
It ' s the Zen of Python!
` ` ` py
>> > love = this
>> > this is love
True
>> > love is True
False
>> > love is False
False
>> > love is not True or False
True
>> > love is not True or False ; love is love # Love is complicated
True
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
* ` this ` module in Python is an easter egg for The Zen Of Python ( [ PEP 20 ] ( https : / / www . python . org / dev / peps / pep - 0020 ) ) .
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* And if you think that ' s already interesting enough, check out the implementation of [this.py](https://hg.python.org/cpython/file/c3896275c0f6/Lib/this.py). Interestingly, **the code for the Zen violates itself** (and that ' s probably the only place where this happens ) .
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* Regarding the statement ` love is not True or False ; love is love ` , ironic but it ' s self-explanatory (if not, please see the examples related to `is` and `is not` operators).
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- - -
### ▶ Yes, it exists!
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< ! - - Example ID : 4286 db3d - 1 ea7 - 47 c9 - 8 fb6 - a9a04cac6e49 - - - >
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* * The ` else ` clause for loops . * * One typical example might be :
` ` ` py
def does_exists_num ( l , to_find ) :
for num in l :
if num == to_find :
print ( " Exists! " )
break
else :
print ( " Does not exist " )
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > some_list = [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ]
>> > does_exists_num ( some_list , 4 )
Exists !
>> > does_exists_num ( some_list , - 1 )
Does not exist
` ` `
* * The ` else ` clause in exception handling . * * An example ,
` ` ` py
try :
pass
except :
print ( " Exception occurred!!! " )
else :
print ( " Try block executed successfully... " )
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
Try block executed successfully . . .
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
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- The ` else ` clause after a loop is executed only when there ' s no explicit `break` after all the iterations. You can think of it as a " nobreak " clause.
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- ` else ` clause after a try block is also called " completion clause " as reaching the ` else ` clause in a ` try ` statement means that the try block actually completed successfully .
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- - -
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### ▶ Ellipsis *
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< ! - - Example ID : 969 b7100 - ab3d - 4 a7d - ad7d - a6be16181b2b - - - >
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` ` ` py
def some_func ( ) :
Ellipsis
` ` `
* * Output * *
` ` ` py
>> > some_func ( )
# No output, No Error
>> > SomeRandomString
Traceback ( most recent call last ) :
File " <stdin> " , line 1 , in < module >
NameError : name ' SomeRandomString ' is not defined
>> > Ellipsis
Ellipsis
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation
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- In Python , ` Ellipsis ` is a globally available built - in object which is equivalent to ` . . . ` .
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` ` ` py
>> > . . .
Ellipsis
` ` `
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- Ellipsis can be used for several purposes ,
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+ As a placeholder for code that hasn ' t been written yet (just like `pass` statement)
+ In slicing syntax to represent the full slices in remaining direction
` ` ` py
>> > import numpy as np
>> > three_dimensional_array = np . arange ( 8 ) . reshape ( 2 , 2 , 2 )
array ( [
[
[ 0 , 1 ] ,
[ 2 , 3 ]
] ,
[
[ 4 , 5 ] ,
[ 6 , 7 ]
]
] )
` ` `
So our ` three_dimensional_array ` is an array of array of arrays . Let ' s say we want to print the second element (index `1`) of all the innermost arrays, we can use Ellipsis to bypass all the preceding dimensions
` ` ` py
>> > three_dimensional_array [ : , : , 1 ]
array ( [ [ 1 , 3 ] ,
[ 5 , 7 ] ] )
>> > three_dimensional_array [ . . . , 1 ] # using Ellipsis.
array ( [ [ 1 , 3 ] ,
[ 5 , 7 ] ] )
` ` `
Note : this will work for any number of dimensions . You can even select slice in first and last dimension and ignore the middle ones this way ( ` n_dimensional_array [ firs_dim_slice , . . . , last_dim_slice ] ` )
+ In [ type hinting ] ( https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / library / typing . html ) to indicate only a part of the type ( like ` ( Callable [ . . . , int ] ` or ` Tuple [ str , . . . ] ` ) )
+ You may also use Ellipsis as a default function argument ( in the cases when you want to differentiate between the " no argument passed " and " None value passed " scenarios ) .
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- - -
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### ▶ Inpinity
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< ! - - Example ID : ff473ea8 - a3b1 - 4876 - a6f0 - 4378 aff790c1 - - - >
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The spelling is intended . Please , don ' t submit a patch for this.
* * Output ( Python 3. x ) : * *
` ` ` py
>> > infinity = float ( ' infinity ' )
>> > hash ( infinity )
314159
>> > hash ( float ( ' -inf ' ) )
- 314159
` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
- Hash of infinity is 10 ⁵ x π .
- Interestingly , the hash of ` float ( ' -inf ' ) ` is " -10⁵ x π " in Python 3 , whereas " -10⁵ x e " in Python 2.
- - -
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### ▶ Let's mangle
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< ! - - Example ID : 37146 d2d - 9e67 - 43 a9 - 8729 - 3 c17934b910c - - - >
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1 \.
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` ` ` py
class Yo ( object ) :
def __init__ ( self ) :
self . __honey = True
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self . bro = True
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
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>> > Yo ( ) . bro
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True
>> > Yo ( ) . __honey
AttributeError : ' Yo ' object has no attribute ' __honey '
>> > Yo ( ) . _Yo__honey
True
` ` `
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2 \.
` ` ` py
class Yo ( object ) :
def __init__ ( self ) :
# Let's try something symmetrical this time
self . __honey__ = True
self . bro = True
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > Yo ( ) . bro
True
>> > Yo ( ) . _Yo__honey__
Traceback ( most recent call last ) :
File " <stdin> " , line 1 , in < module >
AttributeError : ' Yo ' object has no attribute ' _Yo__honey__ '
` ` `
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Why did ` Yo ( ) . _Yo__honey ` work ?
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3 \.
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` ` ` py
_A__variable = " Some value "
class A ( object ) :
def some_func ( self ) :
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return __variable # not initialized anywhere yet
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
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>> > A ( ) . __variable
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Traceback ( most recent call last ) :
File " <stdin> " , line 1 , in < module >
AttributeError : ' A ' object has no attribute ' __variable '
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>> > A ( ) . some_func ( )
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' Some value '
` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation:
* [ Name Mangling ] ( https : / / en . wikipedia . org / wiki / Name_mangling ) is used to avoid naming collisions between different namespaces .
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* In Python , the interpreter modifies ( mangles ) the class member names starting with ` __ ` ( double underscore a . k . a " dunder " ) and not ending with more than one trailing underscore by adding ` _NameOfTheClass ` in front .
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* So , to access ` __honey ` attribute in the first snippet , we had to append ` _Yo ` to the front , which would prevent conflicts with the same name attribute defined in any other class .
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* But then why didn ' t it work in the second snippet? Because name mangling excludes the names ending with double underscores.
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* The third snippet was also a consequence of name mangling . The name ` __variable ` in the statement ` return __variable ` was mangled to ` _A__variable ` , which also happens to be the name of the variable we declared in the outer scope .
* Also , if the mangled name is longer than 255 characters , truncation will happen .
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- - -
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- - -
## Section: Appearances are deceptive!
### ▶ Skipping lines?
< ! - - Example ID : d50bbde1 - fb9d - 4735 - 9633 - 3444 b9d2f417 - - - >
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > value = 11
>> > valuе = 32
>> > value
11
` ` `
Wut ?
* * Note : * * The easiest way to reproduce this is to simply copy the statements from the above snippet and paste them into your file / shell .
#### 💡 Explanation
Some non - Western characters look identical to letters in the English alphabet but are considered distinct by the interpreter .
` ` ` py
>> > ord ( ' е ' ) # cyrillic 'e' (Ye)
1077
>> > ord ( ' e ' ) # latin 'e', as used in English and typed using standard keyboard
101
>> > ' е ' == ' e '
False
>> > value = 42 # latin e
>> > valuе = 23 # cyrillic 'e', Python 2.x interpreter would raise a `SyntaxError` here
>> > value
42
` ` `
The built - in ` ord ( ) ` function returns a character ' s Unicode [code point](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_point), and different code positions of Cyrillic ' e ' and Latin ' e ' justify the behavior of the above example.
- - -
### ▶ Teleportation
< ! - - Example ID : edafe923 - 0 c20 - 4315 - b6e1 - 0 c31abfc38f5 - - - >
` ` ` py
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# `pip install numpy` first.
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import numpy as np
def energy_send ( x ) :
# Initializing a numpy array
np . array ( [ float ( x ) ] )
def energy_receive ( ) :
# Return an empty numpy array
return np . empty ( ( ) , dtype = np . float ) . tolist ( )
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
>> > energy_send ( 123.456 )
>> > energy_receive ( )
123.456
` ` `
Where ' s the Nobel Prize?
#### 💡 Explanation:
* Notice that the numpy array created in the ` energy_send ` function is not returned , so that memory space is free to reallocate .
* ` numpy . empty ( ) ` returns the next free memory slot without reinitializing it . This memory spot just happens to be the same one that was just freed ( usually , but not always ) .
- - -
### ▶ Well, something is fishy...
< ! - - Example ID : cb6a37c5 - 74 f7 - 44 ca - b58c - 3 b902419b362 - - - >
` ` ` py
def square ( x ) :
"""
A simple function to calculate the square of a number by addition .
"""
sum_so_far = 0
for counter in range ( x ) :
sum_so_far = sum_so_far + x
return sum_so_far
` ` `
* * Output ( Python 2. x ) : * *
` ` ` py
>> > square ( 10 )
10
` ` `
Shouldn ' t that be 100?
* * Note : * * If you ' re not able to reproduce this, try running the file [mixed_tabs_and_spaces.py](/mixed_tabs_and_spaces.py) via the shell.
#### 💡 Explanation
* * * Don ' t mix tabs and spaces!** The character just preceding return is a " tab " , and the code is indented by multiple of " 4 spaces " elsewhere in the example.
* This is how Python handles tabs :
> First , tabs are replaced ( from left to right ) by one to eight spaces such that the total number of characters up to and including the replacement is a multiple of eight < . . . >
* So the " tab " at the last line of ` square ` function is replaced with eight spaces , and it gets into the loop .
* Python 3 is kind enough to throw an error for such cases automatically .
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* * Output ( Python 3. x ) : * *
` ` ` py
TabError : inconsistent use of tabs and spaces in indentation
` ` `
- - -
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- - -
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## Section: Miscellaneous
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### ▶ `+=` is faster
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< ! - - Example ID : bfd19c60 - a807 - 4 a26 - 9598 - 4912 b86ddb36 - - - >
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` ` ` py
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# using "+", three strings:
>> > timeit . timeit ( " s1 = s1 + s2 + s3 " , setup = " s1 = ' ' * 100000; s2 = ' ' * 100000; s3 = ' ' * 100000 " , number = 100 )
0.25748300552368164
# using "+=", three strings:
>> > timeit . timeit ( " s1 += s2 + s3 " , setup = " s1 = ' ' * 100000; s2 = ' ' * 100000; s3 = ' ' * 100000 " , number = 100 )
0.012188911437988281
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` ` `
#### 💡 Explanation:
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+ ` + = ` is faster than ` + ` for concatenating more than two strings because the first string ( example , ` s1 ` for ` s1 + = s2 + s3 ` ) is not destroyed while calculating the complete string .
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- - -
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### ▶ Let's make a giant string!
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< ! - - Example ID : c7a07424 - 63 fe - 4504 - 9842 - 8 f3d334f28fc - - - >
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` ` ` py
def add_string_with_plus ( iters ) :
s = " "
for i in range ( iters ) :
s + = " xyz "
assert len ( s ) == 3 * iters
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def add_bytes_with_plus ( iters ) :
s = b " "
for i in range ( iters ) :
s + = b " xyz "
assert len ( s ) == 3 * iters
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def add_string_with_format ( iters ) :
fs = " {} " * iters
s = fs . format ( * ( [ " xyz " ] * iters ) )
assert len ( s ) == 3 * iters
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def add_string_with_join ( iters ) :
l = [ ]
for i in range ( iters ) :
l . append ( " xyz " )
s = " " . join ( l )
assert len ( s ) == 3 * iters
def convert_list_to_string ( l , iters ) :
s = " " . join ( l )
assert len ( s ) == 3 * iters
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` ` `
* * Output : * *
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` ` ` py
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# Executed in ipython shell using %timeit for better readability of results.
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# You can also use the timeit module in normal python shell/scriptm=, example usage below
# timeit.timeit('add_string_with_plus(10000)', number=1000, globals=globals())
>> > NUM_ITERS = 1000
>> > % timeit - n1000 add_string_with_plus ( NUM_ITERS )
124 µs ± 4.73 µs per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 100 loops each )
>> > % timeit - n1000 add_bytes_with_plus ( NUM_ITERS )
211 µs ± 10.5 µs per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 1000 loops each )
>> > % timeit - n1000 add_string_with_format ( NUM_ITERS )
61 µs ± 2.18 µs per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 1000 loops each )
>> > % timeit - n1000 add_string_with_join ( NUM_ITERS )
117 µs ± 3.21 µs per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 1000 loops each )
>> > l = [ " xyz " ] * NUM_ITERS
>> > % timeit - n1000 convert_list_to_string ( l , NUM_ITERS )
10.1 µs ± 1.06 µs per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 1000 loops each )
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` ` `
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Let ' s increase the number of iterations by a factor of 10.
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` ` ` py
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>> > NUM_ITERS = 10000
>> > % timeit - n1000 add_string_with_plus ( NUM_ITERS ) # Linear increase in execution time
1.26 ms ± 76.8 µs per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 1000 loops each )
>> > % timeit - n1000 add_bytes_with_plus ( NUM_ITERS ) # Quadratic increase
6.82 ms ± 134 µs per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 1000 loops each )
>> > % timeit - n1000 add_string_with_format ( NUM_ITERS ) # Linear increase
645 µs ± 24.5 µs per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 1000 loops each )
>> > % timeit - n1000 add_string_with_join ( NUM_ITERS ) # Linear increase
1.17 ms ± 7.25 µs per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 1000 loops each )
>> > l = [ " xyz " ] * NUM_ITERS
>> > % timeit - n1000 convert_list_to_string ( l , NUM_ITERS ) # Linear increase
86.3 µs ± 2 µs per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 1000 loops each )
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` ` `
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#### 💡 Explanation
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- You can read more about [ timeit ] ( https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / library / timeit . html ) or [ % timeit ] ( https : / / ipython . org / ipython - doc / dev / interactive / magics . html #magic-timeit) on these links. They are used to measure the execution time of code pieces.
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- Don ' t use `+` for generating long strings — In Python, `str` is immutable, so the left and right strings have to be copied into the new string for every pair of concatenations. If you concatenate four strings of length 10, you ' ll be copying ( 10 + 10 ) + ( ( 10 + 10 ) + 10 ) + ( ( ( 10 + 10 ) + 10 ) + 10 ) = 90 characters instead of just 40 characters . Things get quadratically worse as the number and size of the string increases ( justified with the execution times of ` add_bytes_with_plus ` function )
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- Therefore , it ' s advised to use `.format.` or ` % ` syntax (however, they are slightly slower than `+` for very short strings).
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- Or better , if already you ' ve contents available in the form of an iterable object, then use ` ' ' .join(iterable_object)` which is much faster.
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- Unlike ` add_bytes_with_plus ` because of the ` + = ` optimizations discussed in the previous example , ` add_string_with_plus ` didn ' t show a quadratic increase in execution time. Had the statement been `s = s + " x " + " y " + " z " ` instead of `s += " xyz " `, the increase would have been quadratic.
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` ` ` py
def add_string_with_plus ( iters ) :
s = " "
for i in range ( iters ) :
s = s + " x " + " y " + " z "
assert len ( s ) == 3 * iters
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>> > % timeit - n100 add_string_with_plus ( 1000 )
388 µs ± 22.4 µs per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 1000 loops each )
>> > % timeit - n100 add_string_with_plus ( 10000 ) # Quadratic increase in execution time
9 ms ± 298 µs per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 100 loops each )
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` ` `
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- So many ways to format and create a giant string are somewhat in contrast to the [ Zen of Python ] ( https : / / www . python . org / dev / peps / pep - 0020 / ) , according to which ,
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> There should be one - - and preferably only one - - obvious way to do it .
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- - -
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### ▶ Slowing down `dict` lookups *
< ! - - Example ID : c9c26ce6 - df0c - 47 f7 - af0b - 966 b9386d4c3 - - - >
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` ` ` py
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some_dict = { str ( i ) : 1 for i in range ( 1_000_000 ) }
another_dict = { str ( i ) : 1 for i in range ( 1_000_000 ) }
` ` `
* * Output : * *
` ` ` py
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>> > % timeit some_dict [ ' 5 ' ]
28.6 ns ± 0.115 ns per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 10000000 loops each )
>> > some_dict [ 1 ] = 1
>> > % timeit some_dict [ ' 5 ' ]
37.2 ns ± 0.265 ns per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 10000000 loops each )
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>> > % timeit another_dict [ ' 5 ' ]
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28.5 ns ± 0.142 ns per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 10000000 loops each )
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>> > another_dict [ 1 ] # Trying to access a key that doesn't exist
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Traceback ( most recent call last ) :
File " <stdin> " , line 1 , in < module >
KeyError : 1
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>> > % timeit another_dict [ ' 5 ' ]
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38.5 ns ± 0.0913 ns per loop ( mean ± std . dev . of 7 runs , 10000000 loops each )
` ` `
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Why are same lookups becoming slower ?
#### 💡 Explanation:
+ CPython has a generic dictionary lookup function that handles all types of keys ( ` str ` , ` int ` , any object . . . ) , and a specialized one for the common case of dictionaries composed of ` str ` - only keys .
+ The specialized function ( named ` lookdict_unicode ` in CPython ' s [source](https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/522691c46e2ae51faaad5bbbce7d959dd61770df/Objects/dictobject.c#L841)) knows all existing keys (including the looked-up key) are strings, and uses the faster & simpler string comparison to compare keys, instead of calling the `__eq__` method.
+ The first time a ` dict ` instance is accessed with a non - ` str ` key , it ' s modified so future lookups use the generic function.
+ This process is not reversible for the particular ` dict ` instance , and the key doesn ' t even have to exist in the dictionary. That ' s why attempting a failed lookup has the same effect .
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### ▶ Bloating instance `dict`s *
< ! - - Example ID : fe706ab4 - 1615 - c0ba - a078 - 76 c98cbe3f48 - - - >
` ` ` py
import sys
class SomeClass :
def __init__ ( self ) :
self . some_attr1 = 1
self . some_attr2 = 2
self . some_attr3 = 3
self . some_attr4 = 4
def dict_size ( o ) :
return sys . getsizeof ( o . __dict__ )
` ` `
* * Output : * * ( Python 3.8 , other Python 3 versions may vary a little )
` ` ` py
>> > o1 = SomeClass ( )
>> > o2 = SomeClass ( )
>> > dict_size ( o1 )
104
>> > dict_size ( o2 )
104
>> > del o1 . some_attr1
>> > o3 = SomeClass ( )
>> > dict_size ( o3 )
232
>> > dict_size ( o1 )
232
` ` `
Let ' s try again... In a new interpreter:
` ` ` py
>> > o1 = SomeClass ( )
>> > o2 = SomeClass ( )
>> > dict_size ( o1 )
104 # as expected
>> > o1 . some_attr5 = 5
>> > o1 . some_attr6 = 6
>> > dict_size ( o1 )
360
>> > dict_size ( o2 )
272
>> > o3 = SomeClass ( )
>> > dict_size ( o3 )
232
` ` `
What makes those dictionaries become bloated ? And why are newly created objects bloated as well ?
#### 💡 Explanation:
+ CPython is able to reuse the same " keys " object in multiple dictionaries . This was added in [ PEP 412 ] ( https : / / www . python . org / dev / peps / pep - 0412 / ) with the motivation to reduce memory usage , specifically in dictionaries of instances - where keys ( instance attributes ) tend to be common to all instances .
+ This optimization is entirely seamless for instance dictionaries , but it is disabled if certain assumptions are broken .
+ Key - sharing dictionaries do not support deletion ; if an instance attribute is deleted , the dictionary is " unshared " , and key - sharing is disabled for all future instances of the same class .
+ Additionaly , if the dictionary keys have be resized ( because new keys are inserted ) , they are kept shared * only * if they are used by a exactly single dictionary ( this allows adding many attributes in the ` __init__ ` of the very first created instance , without causing an " unshare " ) . If multiple instances exist when a resize happens , key - sharing is disabled for all future instances of the same class : CPython can ' t tell if your instances are using the same set of attributes anymore, and decides to bail out on attempting to share their keys.
+ A small tip , if you aim to lower your program ' s memory footprint: don ' t delete instance attributes , and make sure to initialize all attributes in your ` __init__ ` !
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### ▶ Minor Ones *
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< ! - - Example ID : f885cb82 - f1e4 - 4 daa - 9 ff3 - 972 b14cb1324 - - - >
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* ` join ( ) ` is a string operation instead of list operation . ( sort of counter - intuitive at first usage )
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* * 💡 Explanation : * * If ` join ( ) ` is a method on a string , then it can operate on any iterable ( list , tuple , iterators ) . If it were a method on a list , it ' d have to be implemented separately by every type. Also, it doesn ' t make much sense to put a string - specific method on a generic ` list ` object API .
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* Few weird looking but semantically correct statements :
+ ` [ ] = ( ) ` is a semantically correct statement ( unpacking an empty ` tuple ` into an empty ` list ` )
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+ ` ' a ' [ 0 ] [ 0 ] [ 0 ] [ 0 ] [ 0 ] ` is also a semantically correct statement as strings are [ sequences ] ( https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / glossary . html #term-sequence)(iterables supporting element access using integer indices) in Python.
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+ ` 3 - - 0 - - 5 == 8 ` and ` - - 5 == 5 ` are both semantically correct statements and evaluate to ` True ` .
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* Given that ` a ` is a number , ` + + a ` and ` - - a ` are both valid Python statements but don ' t behave the same way as compared with similar statements in languages like C, C++, or Java.
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` ` ` py
>> > a = 5
>> > a
5
>> > + + a
5
>> > - - a
5
` ` `
* * 💡 Explanation : * *
+ There is no ` + + ` operator in Python grammar . It is actually two ` + ` operators .
+ ` + + a ` parses as ` + ( + a ) ` which translates to ` a ` . Similarly , the output of the statement ` - - a ` can be justified .
+ This StackOverflow [ thread ] ( https : / / stackoverflow . com / questions / 3654830 / why - are - there - no - and - operators - in - python ) discusses the rationale behind the absence of increment and decrement operators in Python .
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* You must be aware of the Walrus operator in Python . But have you ever heard about * the space - invader operator * ?
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` ` ` py
>> > a = 42
>> > a - = - 1
>> > a
43
` ` `
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It is used as an alternative incrementation operator , together with another one
` ` ` py
>> > a + = + 1
>> > a
>> > 44
` ` `
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* * 💡 Explanation : * * This prank comes from [ Raymond Hettinger ' s tweet](https://twitter.com/raymondh/status/1131103570856632321?lang=en). The space invader operator is actually just a malformatted `a -= (-1)`. Which is equivalent to `a = a - (- 1)`. Similar for the `a += (+ 1)` case.
* Python has an undocumented [ converse implication ] ( https : / / en . wikipedia . org / wiki / Converse_implication ) operator .
` ` ` py
>> > False * * False == True
True
>> > False * * True == False
True
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>> > True * * False == True
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True
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>> > True * * True == True
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True
` ` `
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* * 💡 Explanation : * * If you replace ` False ` and ` True ` by 0 and 1 and do the maths , the truth table is equivalent to a converse implication operator . ( [ Source ] ( https : / / github . com / cosmologicon / pywat / blob / master / explanation . md #the-undocumented-converse-implication-operator))
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* Since we are talking operators , there ' s also `@` operator for matrix multiplication (don ' t worry , this time it ' s for real).
` ` ` py
>> > import numpy as np
>> > np . array ( [ 2 , 2 , 2 ] ) @ np . array ( [ 7 , 8 , 8 ] )
46
` ` `
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* * 💡 Explanation : * * The ` @ ` operator was added in Python 3.5 keeping the scientific community in mind . Any object can overload ` __matmul__ ` magic method to define behavior for this operator .
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* From Python 3.8 onwards you can use a typical f - string syntax like ` f ' { some_var =} ` for quick debugging. Example,
` ` ` py
>> > some_string = " wtfpython "
>> > f ' { some_string =} '
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" some_string= ' wtfpython ' "
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` ` `
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* Python uses 2 bytes for local variable storage in functions . In theory , this means that only 65536 variables can be defined in a function . However , python has a handy solution built in that can be used to store more than 2 ^ 16 variable names . The following code demonstrates what happens in the stack when more than 65536 local variables are defined ( Warning : This code prints around 2 ^ 18 lines of text , so be prepared ! ) :
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` ` ` py
import dis
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exec ( """
def f ( ) :
""" + """
""" .join([ " X " + str(x) + " = " + str(x) for x in range(65539)]))
f ( )
print ( dis . dis ( f ) )
` ` `
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* Multiple Python threads won ' t run your *Python code* concurrently (yes, you heard it right!). It may seem intuitive to spawn several threads and let them execute your Python code concurrently, but, because of the [Global Interpreter Lock](https://wiki.python.org/moin/GlobalInterpreterLock) in Python, all you ' re doing is making your threads execute on the same core turn by turn . Python threads are good for IO - bound tasks , but to achieve actual parallelization in Python for CPU - bound tasks , you might want to use the Python [ multiprocessing ] ( https : / / docs . python . org / 3 / library / multiprocessing . html ) module .
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* Sometimes , the ` print ` method might not print values immediately . For example ,
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` ` ` py
# File some_file.py
import time
print ( " wtfpython " , end = " _ " )
time . sleep ( 3 )
` ` `
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This will print the ` wtfpython ` after 3 seconds due to the ` end ` argument because the output buffer is flushed either after encountering ` \n ` or when the program finishes execution . We can force the buffer to flush by passing ` flush = True ` argument .
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* List slicing with out of the bounds indices throws no errors
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` ` ` py
>> > some_list = [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ]
>> > some_list [ 111 : ]
[ ]
` ` `
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* Slicing an iterable not always creates a new object . For example ,
` ` ` py
>> > some_str = " wtfpython "
>> > some_list = [ ' w ' , ' t ' , ' f ' , ' p ' , ' y ' , ' t ' , ' h ' , ' o ' , ' n ' ]
>> > some_list is some_list [ : ] # False expected because a new object is created.
False
>> > some_str is some_str [ : ] # True because strings are immutable, so making a new object is of not much use.
True
` ` `
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* ` int ( ' ١٢٣٤٥٦٧٨٩ ' ) ` returns ` 123456789 ` in Python 3. In Python , Decimal characters include digit characters , and all characters that can be used to form decimal - radix numbers , e . g . U + 0660 , ARABIC - INDIC DIGIT ZERO . Here ' s an [interesting story](https://chris.improbable.org/2014/8/25/adventures-in-unicode-digits/) related to this behavior of Python.
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* You can separate numeric literals with underscores ( for better readability ) from Python 3 onwards .
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` ` ` py
>> > six_million = 6_000_000
>> > six_million
6000000
>> > hex_address = 0xF00D_CAFE
>> > hex_address
4027435774
` ` `
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* ` ' abc ' . count ( ' ' ) == 4 ` . Here ' s an approximate implementation of `count` method, which would make the things more clear
` ` ` py
def count ( s , sub ) :
result = 0
for i in range ( len ( s ) + 1 - len ( sub ) ) :
result + = ( s [ i : i + len ( sub ) ] == sub )
return result
` ` `
The behavior is due to the matching of empty substring ( ` ' ' ` ) with slices of length 0 in the original string .
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- - -
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- - -
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# Contributing
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A few ways in which you can contribute to wtfpython ,
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- Suggesting new examples
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- Helping with translation ( See [ issues labeled translation ] ( https : / / github . com / satwikkansal / wtfpython / issues ? q = is % 3 Aissue + is % 3 Aopen + label % 3 Atranslation ) )
- Minor corrections like pointing out outdated snippets , typos , formatting errors , etc .
- Identifying gaps ( things like inadequate explanation , redundant examples , etc . )
- Any creative suggestions to make this project more fun and useful
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Please see [ CONTRIBUTING . md ] ( / CONTRIBUTING . md ) for more details . Feel free to create a new [ issue ] ( https : / / github . com / satwikkansal / wtfpython / issues / new ) to discuss things .
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PS : Please don ' t reach out with backlinking requests, no links will be added unless they ' re highly relevant to the project .
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# Acknowledgements
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The idea and design for this collection were initially inspired by Denys Dovhan ' s awesome project [wtfjs](https://github.com/denysdovhan/wtfjs). The overwhelming support by Pythonistas gave it the shape it is in right now.
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#### Some nice Links!
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* https : / / www . youtube . com / watch ? v = sH4XF6pKKmk
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* https : / / www . reddit . com / r / Python / comments / 3 cu6ej / what_are_some_wtf_things_about_python
* https : / / sopython . com / wiki / Common_Gotchas_In_Python
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* https : / / stackoverflow . com / questions / 530530 / python - 2 - x - gotchas - and - landmines
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* https : / / stackoverflow . com / questions / 1011431 / common - pitfalls - in - python
* https : / / www . python . org / doc / humor /
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* https : / / github . com / cosmologicon / pywat #the-undocumented-converse-implication-operator
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* https : / / www . codementor . io / satwikkansal / python - practices - for - efficient - code - performance - memory - and - usability - aze6oiq65
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* https : / / github . com / wemake - services / wemake - python - styleguide / search ? q = wtfpython & type = Issues
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* WFTPython discussion threads on [ Hacker News ] ( https : / / news . ycombinator . com / item ? id = 21862073 ) and [ Reddit ] ( https : / / www . reddit . com / r / programming / comments / edsh3q / what_the_fck_python_30_exploring_and / ) .
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# 🎓 License
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[ ! [ WTFPL 2.0 ] [ license - image ] ] [ license - url ]
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& copy ; [ Satwik Kansal ] ( https : / / satwikkansal . xyz )
[ license - url ] : http : / / www . wtfpl . net
[ license - image ] : https : / / img . shields . io / badge / License - WTFPL % 202.0 - lightgrey . svg ? style = flat - square
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## Surprise your friends as well!
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If you like wtfpython , you can use these quick links to share it with your friends ,
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[ Twitter ] ( https : / / twitter . com / intent / tweet ? url = https : / / github . com / satwikkansal / wtfpython & text = If % 20 you % 20 really % 20 think % 20 you % 20 know % 20 Python , % 20 think % 20 once % 20 more ! % 20 Check % 20 out % 20 wtfpython & hashtags = python , wtfpython ) | [ Linkedin ] ( https : / / www . linkedin . com / shareArticle ? url = https : / / github . com / satwikkansal & title = What % 20 the % 20 f * ck % 20 Python ! & summary = If % 20 you % 20 really % 20 thing % 20 you % 20 know % 20 Python , % 20 think % 20 once % 20 more ! ) | [ Facebook ] ( https : / / www . facebook . com / dialog / share ? app_id = 536779657179021 & display = page & href = https % 3 A % 2 F % 2 Fgithub . com % 2 Fsatwikkansal % 2 Fwtfpython & quote = If % 20 you % 20 really % 20 think % 20 you % 20 know % 20 Python % 2 C % 20 think % 20 once % 20 more ! )
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## Need a pdf version?
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I ' ve received a few requests for the pdf (and epub) version of wtfpython. You can add your details [here](https://satwikkansal.xyz/wtfpython-pdf/) to get them as soon as they are finished.
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* * That ' s all folks!** For upcoming content like this, you can add your email [here](https://www.satwikkansal.xyz/content-like-wtfpython/).