You're seeing this behaviour because you've created a list, mylst
, with five copies of the same list inside it.
You can see this by using id
, which returns a unique identifier for an object:
In [1]: lst = [[0]*5]*5
In [2]: [id(sublst) for sublst in lst]
Out[2]:
[139951176432584,
139951176432584,
139951176432584,
139951176432584,
139951176432584]
This is because [0]*5
gives you a list with five zeros, but then multiplying it by five gives you five copies of that same list, not five different lists with the same value.
You can avoid this behaviour by using a list comprehension to initialise your original list:
In [3]: lst = [[0]*5 for _ in range(5)]
In [4]: [id(sublst) for sublst in lst]
Out[4]:
[139951176420808,
139951176419528,
139951176419464,
139951176419592,
139951176324040]
As a matter of style, I prefer to avoid using *
to create anything but simple flat lists. For the sake of consistency, then, I'd probably create your list initially with:
In [3]: lst = [[0 for _ in range(5)] for _ in range(5)]
The advantage of this approach is that you don't need to change anything if later on, instead of 0
, you want to initialise the values to a custom object (say, Banana()
).
Without this approach, you can run into the same issue as before, except now it will be the object in the inner list which is repeated:
In [5]: class Banana(object):
...: pass
...:
In [6]: lst = [[Banana()]*5 for _ in range(5)]
In [7]: [[id(elem) for elem in sublst] for sublst in lst]
Out[7]:
[[139951176414824,
139951176414824,
139951176414824,
139951176414824,
139951176414824],
[139951176415272,
139951176415272,
139951176415272,
139951176415272,
139951176415272],
[139951176414096,
139951176414096,
139951176414096,
139951176414096,
139951176414096],
[139951176414432,
139951176414432,
139951176414432,
139951176414432,
139951176414432],
[139951176415496,
139951176415496,
139951176415496,
139951176415496,
139951176415496]]
In other words, the only reason that 0
works at all, in the flat list or otherwise, is that it's not a problem to have multiple copies of the same int
object (along with other builtin types such as float
), as those objects are treated as immutable and compared by value.