I've noticed that many operations on lists that modify the list's contents will return None
, rather than returning the list itself. Examples:
>>> mylist = ['a', 'b', 'c']
>>> empty = mylist.clear()
>>> restored = mylist.extend(range(3))
>>> backwards = mylist.reverse()
>>> with_four = mylist.append(4)
>>> in_order = mylist.sort()
>>> without_one = mylist.remove(1)
>>> mylist
[0, 2, 4]
>>> [empty, restored, backwards, with_four, in_order, without_one]
[None, None, None, None, None, None]
What is the thought process behind this decision?
To me, it seems hampering, since it prevents "chaining" of list processing (e.g. mylist.reverse().append('a string')[:someLimit]
). I imagine it might be that "The Powers That Be" decided that list comprehension is a better paradigm (a valid opinion), and so didn't want to encourage other methods - but it seems perverse to prevent an intuitive method, even if better alternatives exist.
This question is specifically about Python's design decision to return None
from mutating list methods like .append
. However, novices often write incorrect code that expects .append
(in particular) to return the same list that was just modified. Please do close such questions as a duplicate of this one, however. "The code did the wrong thing because the result was None
rather than the list" is something that the OP in these cases should have discovered independently via debugging; creating a proper MRE leaves behind a question like this one - therefore, it can be considered a duplicate.
See How can I collect the results of a repeated calculation in a list, dictionary etc. (or make a copy of a list with each element modified)? for the simple question of "how do I append to a list repeatedly?" (or debugging questions that boil down to that problem). This is a new canonical that has been specifically prepared to address the topic with the perspective that beginners lack.
To get modified versions of the list, see:
- How to allow list append() method to return the new list
- How can I get a sorted copy of a list?
- How do I concatenate two lists in Python? (to replace
.extend
) - A quick way to return list without a specific element in Python (to replace
.remove
) - How can I get a reversed copy of a list (avoid a separate statement when chaining a method after .reverse)?
The same issue applies to some methods of other built-in data types, e.g. set.discard
(see How to remove specific element from sets inside a list using list comprehension) and dict.update
(see Why doesn't a python dict.update() return the object?).
The same reasoning applies to designing your own APIs. See Is making in-place operations return the object a bad idea?.