1

I want to access the value of a variable which is being modified by the while loop, to be continuously printed outside loop. What I did:

x=0

def funcA():
    global x
    while True:
        x=x+1
        return x

def funB():
    print x

Now, I want x to keep print continously:

   1
   2
   3  and so on!

But it does not. I DONT WANT THIS:

def funB():
   while True:
       print x

That is to say that I dont want any while loop inside function funcB(). Thank you very much!

2
  • 3
    The while True in your funcA doesn't do anything at all, because the first time through the loop, you just return.
    – abarnert
    Oct 9, 2013 at 21:55
  • If you want funB to continually print the value of x, you're going to either need to loop within funB or have funB call a function that loops(or pass funB to a function that loops and calls funB). print x on its own will not repeatedly print a value. It might be worth clarifying what you're actually trying to do here, as it's hard to understand from your example. Oct 9, 2013 at 21:58

3 Answers 3

2

I don't know if this is what you are looking for, but you could use a generator.

def funcA():
    x = 0
    while True:
        yield x
        x += 1

def funcB():
    for x in funcA():
        print x #=> 1, 2, 3...
1
  • Thank you very much, I could solve the problem with your help. Apr 11, 2014 at 6:24
1

You don't have a useful loop anywhere. In funcA, you have a while True:, but it just does a return every time through the loop, meaning it just runs once.

So, you could put a loop outside the two functions:

while True:
    funcA()
    funB()

Or, you could fix funcA so it loops forever instead of just once, then call funB from inside it:

def funcA():
    global x
    while True:
        x=x+1
        funB()

Or you could pass funB to funcA and have it call whatever it gets passed:

def funcA(*functions):
    global x
    while True:
        x=x+1
        for function in functions:
            functions()

funcA(funB)

Or you could make funcA yield each time through the loop instead of returning, and use that to drive funB:

def funcA():
    global x
    while True:
        x=x+1
        yield x

for _ in funcA():
    funB()

Or… there are all kinds of things you could do. The question is what you actually want to do. If you can explain that, someone can help you write it.


Meanwhile, you don't actually need a global variable in most of these cases. Given that funcA is already trying to return x, you can just pass the returned value in to funB in the outer-loop version, or pass x itself to funB and to function in the next two versions, and pass the yielded value in the generator version, …

1

A callback would work and avoids the need for a global x:

def funcA(cb):
    x = 0
    while True:
        x=x+1
        cb(x)

def funB(a):
    print a    

funcA(funB)

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