Edit. Follow-up: "so what should i do if i want use the result of hi function in hello function?"
Nothing unusual. Look at hello closely.
def hello(x,y): fordf150 = hi(y,x) "then do somethings,and use the variable 'fordf150'." return somethingdef hi( ix, iy ): "compute some value, good." return goodSome script evaluates hello( 2, 3).
Python creates a new namespace for the evaluation of hello.
In hello, x is bound to the object 2. Binding is done position order.
In hello, y is bound to the object 3.
In hello, Python evaluates the first statement, fordf150 = hi( y, x ), y is 3, x is 2.
a. Python creates a new namespace for the evaluation of hi.
b. In hi, ix is bound to the object 3. Binding is done position order.
c. In hi, iy is bound to the object 2.
d. In hi, something happens and good is bound to some object, say 3.1415926.
e. In hi, a return is executed; identifying an object as the value for hi. In this case, the object is named by good and is the object 3.1415926.
f. The hi namespace is discarded. good, ix and iy vanish. The object (3.1415926), however, remains as the value of evaluating hi.
In hello, Python finishes the first statement, fordf150 = hi( y, x ), y is 3, x is 2. The value of hi is 3.1415926.
a. fordf150 is bound to the object created by evaluating hi, 3.1415926.
In hello, Python moves on to other statements.
At some point something is bound to an object, say, 2.718281828459045.
In hello, a return is executed; identifying an object as the value for hello. In this case, the object is named by something and is the object 2.718281828459045 .
The namespace is discarded. fordf150 and something vanish, as do x and y. The object (2.718281828459045 ), however, remains as the value of evaluating hello.
Whatever program or script called hello gets the answer.
