show/hide this revision's text 2 added 190 characters in body

look at this:

for f in flist:
    print f.func_closure


(<cell at 0x00C980B0: int object at 0x009864B4>,)
(<cell at 0x00C980B0: int object at 0x009864B4>,)
(<cell at 0x00C980B0: int object at 0x009864B4>,)

It means they all point to the same i variable instance, which will have a value of 2 once the loop is over.

A readable solution:

for i in xrange(3):
        def ffunc(i):
            def func(x): return x * i
            return func
        flist.append(ffunc(i))
show/hide this revision's text 1

look at this:

for f in flist:
    print f.func_closure


(<cell at 0x00C980B0: int object at 0x009864B4>,)
(<cell at 0x00C980B0: int object at 0x009864B4>,)
(<cell at 0x00C980B0: int object at 0x009864B4>,)

It means they all point to the same i variable instance, which will have a value of 2 once the loop is over.