It's a good idea to change the formatting, before trying to understand what it does:
def label(self, index, *args):
"""
Label each axes one at a time
args are of the form <label 1>,...,<label n>
APIPARAM: chxl
"""
self.data['labels'].append(
str( '%s:|%s' % \
( index, '|'.join( map( str,args ) ) )
).replace( 'None', '' )
)
return self.parent
So:
it appends something to self.data[ 'labels' ]
list. We know this because append()
is a method of list object.
This something is a string such that:
- string is of the form
xxx:|yyy
xxx
is replaced with the value of argument index
yyy
is replaced with all the other arguments converted to strings (map(str,args)
) and joined with |
character (join(...)
) so resulting in something like 'a|b|None|c
'
- every occurence of
None
in the string above is replaced with an empty string and this is appended to the list
EDIT:
As @abarnert pointed out it might be good to explain what does *args
mean and why later on it's used as args
, so here it goes.
*args
(which is an asterisk + an arbitrary name) means "any number of anonymous arguments available further in args
list". One can also use **kwargs
- note two asterisk which is used for accepting keyworded arguments, i.e. ones passed to the function in the form of foo = bar
where foo
is the name of the argument and bar
is its value rather than just bar
.
As said above args
and kwargs
are arbitrary, one could just as well use *potatoes
or **potatoes
but using args
and kwargs
is a convention in Python (sometimes people also use **kw
instead of **kwargs
, but the meaning is the same - any number of anonymous and any number of keyworded arguments respectively).
Both are used if the number of arguments which the function/method should accept is not known beforehand - consider for a example a function which processes names of the party guests, one may not know how many there may be, so defining a following function makes sense:
def add_party_quests( *quests ):
for guest in quests:
do_some_processing( guest )
Then both calls below are valid:
add_party_guests( 'John' )
add_party_guests( 'Beth', 'Tim', 'Fred' )
This is also explained in this SO post: https://stackoverflow.com/a/287101/680238
self.parent
is defined elsewhere. Otherwise, it's doing some string manipulation and appending to a list.str
is completely unnecessary. Unconditionally callingstr
on each arg and then doingreplace('None','')
on the joined result, rather than just doing the right conversion in the first place, is confusing (and a red flag that someone hasn't learned list comprehensions…). Of course you do need to learn how to read code like this anyway, but it's worth knowing that this is as much the original coder's fault than your own, so you don't get too down on yourself.