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I just encountered this bug:

def fn_that_uses_a_list(list):
  if (list[-1] < 0): list += [0]
  for item in list:
    print(item)

l = [-4, -2]
fn_that_uses_a_list(l)
# Now suddenly l has three items.

However, if I change list += [0] to list = list + [0], then things work. I find this confusing, but it could be because I'm new to Python.

Why is there a difference in this case? I'm looking for a more existential answer, rather than "list is a reference so += modifies the original"

Am I doing something "un-pythonic" that's causing me to run into the bug?

4
  • 3
    What is your expected behaviour? Don't you want list to have three items after the function?
    – syntonym
    Jun 17, 2015 at 18:25
  • What's wrong here !!
    – Iron Fist
    Jun 17, 2015 at 18:27
  • @syntonym No. I temporarily need a list with three items during the function. I still need the original list to stay the same after calling the function...
    – user228534
    Jun 17, 2015 at 18:32
  • Well, using list as a variable name is a bit unpythonic to start with. But if it's your intent to create a new list, then I'd use a new variable name for that new list in your code: my_new_list = list + [0] if list[-1] < 0 else list. That'll prevent you from running into the += trap. OTOH, if it's your intent to modify the incoming list, then it looks like you're getting exactly the behaviour that you want. Jun 17, 2015 at 18:32

1 Answer 1

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Not sure what you are after, if I use both list += [0] and list = list + [0] I get the same result.

That said, += mutates the list, while + creates a new list. Try:

def fn_that_uses_a_list(list):
  if (list[-1] < 0):
    print id(list)
    list += [0]
    # list = list + [0]
    print id(list)
  for item in list:
    print(item)

l = [-4, -2]
fn_that_uses_a_list(l)
1
  • I think the intend was not that the prints print something differently, but the mutation of the list takes place.
    – syntonym
    Jun 17, 2015 at 18:34