0

My function is as follows using python:

def PlotCurve(SourceClipName,mode,TestDetails,savepath='../captures/',**args):

    curves=[]
    for a in range(0,len(args)):
        y=[]
        for testrates in TestDetails.BitratesInTest:

            stub = args[a].Directory[testrates]
            y.append(args[a].DataSet[stub][0])
            curves.append(y)

    plt.figure()
    plt.xlabel("Bitrate")
    plt.ylabel(mode)
    plt.title(TestDetails.HDorSD+" "+TestDetails.Codec + " " + SourceClipName[:-4])
    colour=["green","red","brown","orange","purple","grey","black","yellow","white",]
    CurveIDs=[]
    for x in args:
        CurveIDs.append(args.ID)
    p=[]    
    for b in range(0,len(args)-1):
        p[b].plot(TestDetails.BitratesInTest,y[b],c=colour[b])

    plt.legend((p),(CurveIDs),prop={"size":8})
    plt.savefig(os.path.join(savepath,mode+"_"+TestDetails.codec+"_"+SourceClipName[:-4]+".png"))

The error specifically is

TypeEror: PlotCurve() takes at most 4 arguments (5 given)

**args is a list of objects that has been passed into the function

It appears to me that I have defined a function which accepts 5 or more arguments (regardless of whether it works properly or not), but the program disagrees, what is it I am missing which makes the function think it can only have at most 4 parameters?

2
  • Use *args, not **kwargs. Jul 24, 2014 at 10:57
  • You have defined a function that takes four arguments, plus an unlimited number of key/value arguments. Jul 24, 2014 at 11:55

3 Answers 3

3

Use *args, not **kwargs (or **anything), or call the function with parameter names. This will result in a variadic list of the overflow parameters which can then be iterated as done to extract the IDs.

Arguments must be specified by name to apply toward **kwargs and not the parameter count.


See *args and **kwargs?

You would use *args when you're not sure how many arguments might be passed to your function, i.e. it allows you pass an arbitrary number of arguments to your function .. Similarly, **kwargs allows you to handle named arguments that you have not defined in advance.

5
  • My problem with trying to use *args as opposed to **args is that it results in the function saying that none of the variables that are within each object in each position of the list exist(which I require).Can you tell me if this is a symptom of *args that means it doesn't allow you to pass a list of objects in or whether there is a more inherent problem with the code? Jul 24, 2014 at 11:14
  • @yellowlemming How is the function be called? Inside the function, *args is a list. To apply a list to a function call, use the converse f(*args) form. But it may be better just to take a list as a separate discrete (named) parameter. Jul 24, 2014 at 11:50
  • The function is being called in the form PlotCurve(filename,"MS_SSIM",TestDetails,"../captures/",CurveList[2:3]) and different calls use different parts of the list CurveList so it would be difficult to name the list explicitly. Jul 24, 2014 at 11:58
  • Simply take an additional parameter then - a list. def PlotCurve(clipName, mode, testDetails, savepath='../captures/', curve=[]). The use of *args is for a variadic number of arguments. Jul 24, 2014 at 12:03
  • Thankyou, not sure how I didn't think of that Jul 24, 2014 at 12:05
1

When you say, **args is a list of objects that has been passed into the function, then it's with single *

When you define a function with **args as one of the argument it will fail to unpack, while you pass key-value pair

**kwargs to be mapped with dictionary

*args to be mapped with list

or you can have them both, as,

>>> def func(argone, *args, **kwargs):
>>>    # do stuff
>>>
>>> func(1, *[1, 2, 3, 4])
>>> func(1, *[1, 2, 3, 4], **{'a': 1, 'b': 2})
>>>
0

Most likely you double typed *, as convenience for naming optional positional arguments is *args and optional named arguments is **kwargs.

So your function actually accepts 4 positional arguments and arbitrary number of keyword arguments. If you call it like this:

PlotCurve(1,2,3,4,5) # you should get error
PlotCurve(1,2,3,4,aaa=5) # you should have args = {'aaa': 5}

To fix this, most likely you need to remove second star.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.