Python: Passing variables between functions
I've spent the past few hours reading around in here and elsewhere, as well as experimenting, but I'm not really understanding what I am sure is a very basic concept: passing values (as variables) between different functions.
For example, I assign a whole bunch of values to a list in one function, then want to use that list in another function later:
list = []
def defineAList():
list = ['1','2','3']
print "For checking purposes: in defineAList, list is",list
return list
def useTheList(list):
print "For checking purposes: in useTheList, list is",list
def main():
defineAList()
useTheList(list)
main()
Based on my understanding of what function arguments do, I would expect this to do as follows:
- Initialize 'list' as an empty list; call main (this, at least, I know I've got right...)
- Within defineAList(), assign certain values into the list; then pass the new list back into main()
- Within main(), call useTheList(list)
- Since 'list' is included in the parameters of the useTheList function, I would expect that useTheList would now use the list as defined by defineAList(), NOT the empty list defined before calling main.
However, this is obviously a faulty understanding. My output is:
For checking purposes: in defineAList, list is ['1', '2', '3']
For checking purposes: in useTheList, list is []
So, since "return" obviously does not do what I think it does, or at least it does not do it the way I think it should... what does it actually do? Could you please show me, using this example, what I would have to do to take the list from defineAList() and use it within useTheList()? I tend to understand things better when I see them happening, but a lot of the examples of proper argument-passing I've seen also use code I'm not familiar with yet, and in the process of figuring out what's going on, I'm not really getting a handle on this concept. I'm using 2.7.
ETA- in the past, asking a similar question, it was suggested that I use a global variable instead of just locals. If it will be relevant here also- for the purposes of the class I'm taking, we're not permitted to use globals.
Thank you!
This is what is actually happening:
global_list = []
def defineAList():
local_list = ['1','2','3']
print "For checking purposes: in defineAList, list is", local_list
return local_list
def useTheList(passed_list):
print "For checking purposes: in useTheList, list is", passed_list
def main():
# returned list is ignored
returned_list = defineAList()
# passed_list inside useTheList is set to global_list
useTheList(global_list)
main()
This is what you want:
def defineAList():
local_list = ['1','2','3']
print "For checking purposes: in defineAList, list is", local_list
return local_list
def useTheList(passed_list):
print "For checking purposes: in useTheList, list is", passed_list
def main():
# returned list is ignored
returned_list = defineAList()
# passed_list inside useTheList is set to what is returned from defineAList
useTheList(returned_list)
main()
You can even skip the temporary returned_list
and pass the returned value directly to useTheList
:
def main():
# passed_list inside useTheList is set to what is returned from defineAList
useTheList(defineAList())
You're just missing one critical step. You have to explicitly pass the return value in to the second function.
def main():
l = defineAList()
useTheList(l)
Alternatively:
def main():
useTheList(defineAList())
Or (though you shouldn't do this! It might seem nice at first, but globals just cause you grief in the long run.):
l = []
def defineAList():
global l
l.extend(['1','2','3'])
def main():
global l
defineAList()
useTheList(l)
The function returns a value, but it doesn't create the symbol in any sort of global namespace as your code assumes. You have to actually capture the return value in the calling scope and then use it for subsequent operations.
return
returns a value. It doesn't matter what name you gave to that value. Returning it just "passes it out" so that something else can use it. If you want to use it, you have to grab it from outside:
lst = defineAList()
useTheList(lst)
Returning list
from inside defineAList
doesn't mean "make it so the whole rest of the program can use that variable". It means "pass the value of this variable out and give the rest of the program one chance to grab it and use it". You need to assign that value to something outside the function in order to make use of it. Also, because of this, there is no need to define your list ahead of time with list = []
. Inside defineAList
, you create a new list and return it; this list has no relationship to the one you defined with list = []
at the beginning.
Incidentally, I changed your variable name from list
to lst
. It's not a good idea to use list
as a variable name because that is already the name of a built-in Python type. If you make your own variable called list
, you won't be able to access the builtin one anymore.
Your return is useless if you don't assign it
list=defineAList()