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?
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.