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Why does creating/modifying a member of locals() not work within a function?

Python 2.5 (release25-maint, Jul 20 2008, 20:47:25)
[GCC 4.1.2 20061115 (prerelease) (Debian 4.1.1-21)] on linux2
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>>> # Here's an example of what I expect to be possible in a function:
>>> a = 1
>>> locals()["a"] = 2
>>> print a
2

>>> # ...and here's what actually happens:
>>> def foo():
...  b = 3
...  locals()["b"] = 4
...  print b
...
>>> foo()
3
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Why would you want to do this kind of thing? – S.Lott Mar 26 at 17:48
I wanted to initialise a load of variables using data fetched externally. So my idea was: 1 Declare all variables as "= None" 2 Create a mapping of varname -> external source path 3 Iterate map, setting variables or aborting with an error But I ran into problems setting my variables. – RobM Mar 27 at 11:39

2 Answers

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Why would it? It's designed to return a representation, and was never intended for editing the locals. It's not ever guaranteed to work as a tool for such, as the documentation warns.

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Ah, I missed that because I only read the online help(). Thanks. – RobM Mar 26 at 17:23
@Devin, because that would be the least surprising behavior, esp since you can modify globals in a similar way. – allyourcode Oct 17 at 5:34
This is a fair complaint. For what it's worth, it works this way because Python speeds up local access in a way that makes this impossible, whereas the global namespace makes no such optimization (though that has been suggested, e.g. PEP 266). It is arguably a leaky abstraction that should go away. My personal preference would be to make globals() work the way locals() does now, rather than make locals() work like globals() does now. Regardless, my answer was more of a sneaky reference to the docs than a reference to intuition. It wouldn't do it because the docs don't say it should. – Devin Jeanpierre Oct 17 at 23:46
vote up 2 vote down

locals() return a copy of the namespace (which is the opposite of what globals() does). This means that any change you perform on the dictionary returned by locals() will have no effect. Check in dive into python at example 4.12.

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Those aren't the docs, that's Dive into Python. – Devin Jeanpierre Mar 26 at 18:00
whoops. you are right :) – Stefano Borini Mar 26 at 18:44

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