I'm using a recursive function to sort a list in Python, and I want to keep track of the number of sorts/merges as the function continues. However, when I declare/initialize the variable inside the function, it becomes a local variable inside each successive call of the function. If I declare the variable outside the function, the function thinks it doesn't exist (i.e. has no access to it). How can I share this value across different calls of the function?
I tried to use the "global" variable tag inside and outside the function like this:
global invcount ## I tried here, with and without the global tag
def inv_sort (listIn):
global invcount ## and here, with and without the global tag
if (invcount == undefined): ## can't figure this part out
invcount = 0
#do stuff
But I cannot figure out how to check for the undefined status of the global variable and give it a value on the first recursion call (because on all successive recursions it should have a value and be defined).
My first thought was to return the variable out of each call of the function, but I can't figure out how to pass two objects out of the function, and I already have to pass the list out for the recursion sort to work. My second attempt to resolve this issue involved me adding the variable invcount
to the list I'm passing as the last element with an identifier, like "i27"
. Then I could just check for the presence of the identifier (the letter i
in this example) in the last element and if present pop() it off at the beginning of the function call and re-add it during the recursion. In practice this is becoming really convoluted and while it may work eventually, I'm wondering if there is a more practical or easier solution.
Is there a way to share a variable without directly passing/returning it?
listIn
or create and return a new list?