vote up 6 vote down star
4

In Perl, it's often nice to be able to assign an object, but specify some fall-back value if the variable being assigned from is 'undef'. For instance:

my $x = undef;
my $y = 2;
my $a = $x || $y;

After this,

$a == 2

Is there a concise way to achieve this in Python if the value x is None, or would a full-on ...

if x is not None
    a = x
else
    a = y

... be the most Pythonic way to achieve this?

EDIT: Apologies, as has been pointed out by several commenters, I wasn't really talking about the value being undefined, but 'undef' in Perl, which is not really the same thing. But the question as originally worded didn't make this clear.

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75% accept rate
2  
Please keep in mind that "if the variable being assigned from is undefined" is WRONG. "if the variable being assigned from is false" is much closer to the truth. – Manni Apr 20 at 13:19
1  
To follow up Manni's comment: it's better to use the defined-or operator "//" if you can rely on Perl 5.10 or later. (Not that this has any bearing on how you would do it in Python.) – Michael Carman Apr 20 at 14:42

9 Answers

vote up 16 vote down check

Since 2.5:

If you want to fall back only on None:

a = x if x is not None else y

If you want to fall back also on empty string, false, 0 etc.:

a = x if x else y

or

a = x or y


As for undefined (as never defined, a.k.a. not bound):

try:
  a = x 
except NameError:
  a = y

or a bit more hackish (I'd not really recommend that, but it's short):

a = vars().get('x',y)
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Way better than mine... – Greg Apr 20 at 13:14
hm, so x is defined after all :/ – SilentGhost Apr 20 at 13:18
@greg: it's not better than yours but it's equally mistaken – SilentGhost Apr 20 at 13:37
@SilentGhost: for the problem I was solving (x is defined and None), I think this is easier to read. – Greg Apr 20 at 14:05
This soultion doesn't work when x is 0 or negative or an empty list etc. – randle-taylor Apr 20 at 14:51
show 1 more comment
vote up 0 vote down

One way to rewrite...

if x is not None
    a = x
else
    a = y

..is:

x = myfunction()

if x is None:
    x = y

print x

Or, using exceptions (possibly more Python'y, depending on the what the code is doing - if it returns None because there was an error, using an exception is probably the correct way):

try:
    x = myfunction()
except AnException:
    x = "fallback"

print x

All that said, there really isn't anything wrong with you original code:

if x is not None
    a = x
else
    a = y

It's long, but I find that far easier to read (and much more Pythonic) than either of the following one-liners:

a = x if x is not None else y
a = x or y
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vote up 3 vote down

Just some nitpicking with your Perl example:

my $x = undef;

This redundant code can be shortened to:

my $x;

And the following code doesn't do what you say it does:

my $a = $x || $y;

This actually assigns $y to $a when $x is false. False values include things like undef, zero, and the empty string. To only test for definedness, you could do the following (as of Perl 5.10):

my $a = $x // $y;
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vote up 2 vote down

I am quite convinced that there is no 'pythonic' way to do this, because this is not a pattern that is pythonic. Control should not reach an undefined variable reference in elegant code. There are similar ideas that are pythonic. Most obvious:

def myRange(start, stop=None):
    start, stop = (0, start) if stop is None else (start, stop)
    ...

What's important is that stop is defined in scope, but the caller didn't have to pass it explicitly, only that it has taken it's default value, altering the semantics of the arguments, which in effect causes the first argument to be optional instead of the second, even where the language does not allow that without this clever trick.

That being said, something like this might follow the premise without using a try-catch block.

a = locals().get('x', y)
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+1 Agreed 100% when you say "because this is not a pattern that is pythonic" – Shane C. Mason Apr 20 at 16:17
vote up 0 vote down

Most of the solutions relying on if statements don't work for the case where x is 0 or negative.

>>> x = 0
>>> y = 2
>>> a = x or y
>>> a
2
>>>

If you knew the name of the variable ahead of time you could look for like so:

if 'x' in dir():
    a = x 
except:
     a =y

However that solution seems kind of sloppy to me. I believe the best method is to use a try except block like so:

try:
    a = x
else:
    a = y
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vote up 4 vote down

first you can do your full-on with a ternary:

a = y if x is None else x

but it doesn't solve your problem. what you want to do is more closely implemented with:

try:
    a = x
except:
    a = y
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Sorry, yes, this wasn't actually what I was looking for but is a good answer to the question I actually asked! – Andy Apr 20 at 13:37
@Andy: read most upvoted comment to the accepted answer to see why it's not answering your question actually – SilentGhost Apr 20 at 13:39
This solution seems like the proper way to do it. You could make it more concise by just doing: try: a = x except: a = y – randle-taylor Apr 20 at 14:21
You should make sure to catch an explicit NameError. – miracle2k Apr 21 at 8:18
vote up 1 vote down

I think this would help, since the problem comes down to check whether a variable is defined or not:
Easy way to check that variable is defined in python?

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vote up -1 vote down

If it's an argument to a function you can do this:

def MyFunc( a=2 ):
    print "a is %d"%a

>>> MyFunc()
...a is 2
>>> MyFunc(5)
...a is 5

[Edit] For the downvoters.. the if/else bit is unnecessary for the solution - just added to make the results clear. Edited it to remove the if statement if that makes it clearer?

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I have no idea what coerced you to add the if else in MyFunc. If you kill the if, else, and else block, it all still works the same. – Stefan Kendall Apr 20 at 13:29
Of course it does - I was just trying to illustrate the results! – Jon Cage Apr 20 at 13:42
+1 to neutralize since you corrected. :) – Shane C. Mason Apr 20 at 16:18
vote up 1 vote down

There's python's ternary operation:

a = x if x is not None else y

Available in 2.5 and up.

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