446

I already read How to get a function name as a string?.

How can I do the same for a variable? As opposed to functions, Python variables do not have the __name__ attribute.

In other words, if I have a variable such as:

foo = dict()
foo['bar'] = 2

I am looking for a function/attribute, e.g. retrieve_name, where:

>>> retrieve_name(foo)
'foo'

This is in order to create a DataFrame in Pandas from this list, where the column names are given by the names of the actual dictionaries:

# List of dictionaries for my DataFrame
list_of_dicts = [n_jobs, users, queues, priorities]
columns = [retrieve_name(d) for d in list_of_dicts] 
3
  • 1
    For constants, you can use an enum, which supports retrieving its name.
    – Dana
    Aug 23, 2017 at 23:00
  • 2
    I came across a similar problem. I realize instead of storing the original data as a list of things, you can store it as a dict of things, (and you can easily generate a list from the dict on the fly if you want). For example, suppose you have: my_dict = {'n_jobs': ..., 'users': ...}. Then you can use my_dict['n_jobs'] in lieu of n_jobs. Anyway, what matters to me is that I only need to type "n_jobs" once, either as a var name or as a string in the dict key.
    – Ying Zhang
    Jun 3, 2021 at 13:59
  • 1
    Variables don't "have names"; "variable" means the same thing as "name" in Python. Presumably you meant value (as in, the actual object that is being named); but values don't actually "have" names - rather, they are named. In other words, the name has (holds onto) the value. Any value could be named any number of times, including zero. Oct 15, 2022 at 6:08

38 Answers 38

286

With Python 3.8 one can simply use f-string debugging feature:

>>> foo = dict()
>>> f'{foo=}'.split('=')[0]
'foo' 

One drawback of this method is that in order to get 'foo' printed you have to add f'{foo=}' yourself. In other words, you already have to know the name of the variable. In other words, the above code snippet is exactly the same as just

>>> 'foo'
17
  • 183
    How is this useful in anyway ? One can only get the result "foo" if one manually write "foo". It doen't solve OP problem.
    – Hugo
    Dec 11, 2020 at 8:34
  • 12
    It did address OP problem at the time of answer. This question has 'evolved' over time, there was question which header was in par with content. Then there was update with pandas part, clearly labeled 'Update'. Then it was edited and made part of question and this was left out: I am looking for a function/attribute, e.g. retrieve_name: retrieve_name(foo) that returns the string 'foo' . Now anybody who is 'late to the party' can wonder what the heck these answers about... Dec 11, 2020 at 16:10
  • 18
    The point that many seem to be missing (except @ Hugo) is that in order be able to write f'{foo=}'.split('=')[0] you obviously already know the name of the variable.
    – martineau
    Aug 14, 2021 at 10:23
  • 8
    @Hugo I was searching for this to save typing. I had a number of pandas dataframes to export to .xlsx, where the name of the dataframe is the name of the sheet in the output excel file like so: vel.to_excel(writer,sheet_name='vel'), vol.to_excel(writer,sheet_name='vol'), area.to_excel(writer,sheet_name='area'). It would have saved typing, reduced the chance for errors, and made the code more readable to drop the dataframes into a list and then do the export in a for loop - for df in df_list: df.to_excel(writer,sheet_name=df.name) or something similar. Aug 28, 2021 at 1:01
  • 7
    It does help detect variable name changes. and the IDE will show old values as an error. For example, if one day 'foo' is changed to 'boo', strings like "foo is a var" will stay with the old name, which is not good, while f"{foo=}".split('=')[0] + "is a var" will have compile error and force the developer to also change the {foo=} to {boo=}.
    – motcke
    Dec 14, 2021 at 14:42
172

Even if variable values don't point back to the name, you have access to the list of every assigned variable and its value, so I'm astounded that only one person suggested looping through there to look for your var name.

Someone mentioned on that answer that you might have to walk the stack and check everyone's locals and globals to find foo, but if foo is assigned in the scope where you're calling this retrieve_name function, you can use inspect's currentframe to get you all of those local variables.

My explanation might be a little bit too wordy (maybe I should've used a "foo" less words), but here's how it would look in code (Note that if there is more than one variable assigned to the same value, you will get both of those variable names):

import inspect

x, y, z = 1, 2, 3

def retrieve_name(var):
    callers_local_vars = inspect.currentframe().f_back.f_locals.items()
    return [var_name for var_name, var_val in callers_local_vars if var_val is var]

print(retrieve_name(y))

If you're calling this function from another function, something like:

def foo(bar):
    return retrieve_name(bar)

foo(baz)

And you want the baz instead of bar, you'll just need to go back a scope further. This can be done by adding an extra .f_back in the caller_local_vars initialization.

See an example here: ideone

11
  • 1
    @theodox I absolutely agree, as this will probably act up with import hooks, ironpython, and jython
    – scohe001
    Aug 25, 2013 at 4:04
  • 13
    This won't work. atomic variables don't have their name as an attribute. So if you have a, b = 2, 2, retrieve_name(a) and retrieve_name(b) will both return ['a', 'b'] or ['b', 'a']
    – tomas
    Apr 15, 2016 at 10:41
  • 3
    @tomas Actually, that is an implementation detail of an optimization of cPython in which integers below 255 are basically singletons, so any variables assigned those values will effectively return true for an is comparison
    – Toote
    Jan 25, 2017 at 13:51
  • 2
    is there a mod of this to get the name of a passed var? e.g. def foo(bar): retrieve_name(bar) will always return bar, but what if you want foo(baz) to return baz) instead of bar?
    – SumNeuron
    Apr 1, 2019 at 14:30
  • 2
    @SumNeuron you'd just have to modify the line that assigns callers_local_vars to go one scope further back so it'll be looking at the scope of whatever is calling foo. Change the line to be inspect.currentframe().f_back.f_back.f_locals.items() (notice the extra f_back).
    – scohe001
    Apr 1, 2019 at 14:55
137

The only objects in Python that have canonical names are modules, functions, and classes, and of course there is no guarantee that this canonical name has any meaning in any namespace after the function or class has been defined or the module imported. These names can also be modified after the objects are created so they may not always be particularly trustworthy.

What you want to do is not possible without recursively walking the tree of named objects (or at least iterating the list of names in the containing scope as in @scohe001's answer); a name is a one-way reference to an object. A common or garden-variety Python object contains no references to its names. Imagine if every integer, every dict, every list, every Boolean needed to maintain a list of strings that represented names that referred to it! It would be an implementation nightmare, with little benefit to the programmer.

8
  • 9
    Thanks. But why does Python do this for functions then ? (i.e. one type of Python objects) Aug 25, 2013 at 3:09
  • 18
    Your statement "it simply isn't possible" is False, as @scohe001 showed. Python's variable name database is just like any other relational DB, you can always search for related objects in "reverse" and return the first found or the whole set of valid variable names for any given variable.
    – hobs
    Jan 13, 2016 at 20:52
  • 4
    @hobs You are technically correct... the best kind of correct. In practice, however, there are so many potential names for an object that it's more trouble than it's worth to try to get them.
    – kindall
    Apr 18, 2016 at 20:35
  • 2
    @kindall I guess you're right if your "worth it" threshold is O(1). scohe001 's loop would be O(N).
    – hobs
    Apr 20, 2016 at 18:20
  • 4
    @hobs Well, an object could be a member of a list or a dictionary or other container, or an object attribute... so in that case you'd need to find the name of the containing object too... and that too might be contained by another object... so you may need to recursively find names until you reach an object that can be reached by the current code. That seems like a lot of error-prone code to write and debug for not much benefit.
    – kindall
    Apr 20, 2016 at 18:28
102

TL;DR

Use the Wrapper helper from python-varname:

from varname.helpers import Wrapper

foo = Wrapper(dict())

# foo.name == 'foo'
# foo.value == {}
foo.value['bar'] = 2

For list comprehension part, you can do:

n_jobs = Wrapper(<original_value>) 
users = Wrapper(<original_value>) 
queues = Wrapper(<original_value>) 
priorities = Wrapper(<original_value>) 

list_of_dicts = [n_jobs, users, queues, priorities]
columns = [d.name for d in list_of_dicts]
# ['n_jobs', 'users', 'queues', 'priorities']
# REMEMBER that you have to access the <original_value> by d.value

I am the author of the python-varname package. Please let me know if you have any questions or you can submit issues on Github.

The long answer

Is it even possible?

Yes and No.

We are retrieving the variable names at runtime, so we need a function to be called to enable us to access the previous frames to retrieve the variable names. That's why we need a Wrapper there. In that function, at runtime, we are parsing the source code/AST nodes in the previous frames to get the exact variable name.

However, the source code/AST nodes in the previous frames are not always available, or they could be modified by other environments (e.g: pytest's assert statement). One simple example is that the codes run via exec(). Even though we are still able to retrieve some information from the bytecode, it needs too much effort and it is also error-prone.

How to do it?

First of all, we need to identify which frame the variable is given. It's not always simply the direct previous frame. For example, we may have another wrapper for the function:

from varname import varname

def func():
  return varname()

def wrapped():
  return func()

x = wrapped()

In the above example, we have to skip the frame inside wrapped to get to the right frame x = wrapped() so that we are able to locate x. The arguments frame and ignore of varname allow us to skip some of these intermediate frames. See more details in the README file and the API docs of the package.

Then we need to parse the AST node to locate where the variable is assigned value (function call) to. It's not always just a simple assignment. Sometimes there could be complex AST nodes, for example, x = [wrapped()]. We need to identify the correct assignment by traversing the AST tree.

How reliable is it?

Once we identify the assignment node, it is reliable.

varname is all depending on executing package to look for the node. The node executing detects is ensured to be the correct one (see also this).

It partially works with environments where other AST magics apply, including pytest, ipython, macropy, birdseye, reticulate with R, etc. Neither executing nor varname is 100% working with those environments.

Do we need a package to do it?

Well, yes and no, again.

If your scenario is simple, the code provided by @juan Isaza or @scohe001 probably is enough for you to work with the case where a variable is defined at the direct previous frame and the AST node is a simple assignment. You just need to go one frame back and retrieve the information there.

However, if the scenario becomes complicated, or we need to adopt different application scenarios, you probably need a package like python-varname, to handle them. These scenarios may include to:

  1. present more friendly messages when the source code is not available or AST nodes are not accessible
  2. skip intermediate frames (allows the function to be wrapped or called in other intermediate frames)
  3. automatically ignores calls from built-in functions or libraries. For example: x = str(func())
  4. retrieve multiple variable names on the left-hand side of the assignment
  5. etc.

How about the f-string?

Like the answer provided by @Aivar Paalberg. It's definitely fast and reliable. However, it's not at runtime, meaning that you have to know it's foo before you print the name out. But with varname, you don't have to know that variable is coming:

from varname import varname

def func():
  return varname()

# In external uses
x = func() # 'x'
y = func() # 'y'

Finally

python-varname is not only able to detect the variable name from an assignment, but also:

  • Retrieve variable names directly, using nameof
  • Detect next immediate attribute name, using will
  • Fetch argument names/sources passed to a function using argname

Read more from its documentation.

However, the final word I want to say is that, try to avoid using it whenever you can.

Because you can't make sure that the client code will run in an environment where the source node is available or AST node is accessible. And of course, it costs resources to parse the source code, identify the environment, retrieve the AST nodes and evaluate them when needed.

19
  • 3
    OK, finally got it! Installed using the following pip3 install python-varname==0.1.5; imported using from varname import nameof Jun 6, 2020 at 2:42
  • 1
    @Tillus Fixed at v0.2.0 Jul 17, 2020 at 18:34
  • 1
    While the python-varname master branch has a caller argument for nameof that technically allows disambiguating the columns example in the question (due to the extra scope created by the list comprehension), this is no help if you instead try to populate columns through an ordinary for loop. In that case, disambiguation is impossible. Objects carry no information about any "original" or "true" variable. (Also, the caller argument is unreleased.) Aug 13, 2020 at 10:51
  • 1
    @PanwenWang, would you mind adding varname to any annaconda channel ?
    – Jiadong
    Apr 6, 2021 at 2:07
  • 2
    @ted930511 I don't mind if anyone else adding it to any conda channel. And it is welcome to be a contributor to the project by adding it to a channel and keeping it up-to-date. Apr 7, 2021 at 4:50
53

On python3, this function will get the outer most name in the stack:

import inspect


def retrieve_name(var):
    """
    Gets the name of var. Does it from the out most frame inner-wards.
    :param var: variable to get name from.
    :return: string
    """
    for fi in reversed(inspect.stack()):
        names = [var_name for var_name, var_val in fi.frame.f_locals.items() if var_val is var]
        if len(names) > 0:
            return names[0]

It is useful anywhere on the code. Traverses the reversed stack looking for the first match.

2
  • 1
    Nice job! Though I try retrieve_name(SomeClass.some_attribute) it doesn't work. May you help further on that?
    – Nam G VU
    Mar 27, 2018 at 7:59
  • This struggles with boolean variables. I end up with stop_on_error
    – SumNeuron
    Apr 2, 2019 at 8:39
33

I don't believe this is possible. Consider the following example:

>>> a = []
>>> b = a
>>> id(a)
140031712435664
>>> id(b)
140031712435664

The a and b point to the same object, but the object can't know what variables point to it.

1
  • 2
    Surely the relationship can be made two-way by extending reference counting. This answer (and some others) even provides an implementation.
    – shayaan
    Nov 15, 2018 at 15:22
18
>> my_var = 5
>> my_var_name = [ k for k,v in locals().items() if v == my_var][0]
>> my_var_name 
'my_var'

In case you get an error if myvar points to another variable, try this (suggested by @mherzog)-

 >> my_var = 5
>> my_var_name = [ k for k,v in locals().items() if v is my_var][0]
>> my_var_name 
'my_var'

locals() - Return a dictionary containing the current scope's local variables. by iterating through this dictionary we can check the key which has a value equal to the defined variable, just extracting the key will give us the text of variable in string format.

from (after a bit changes) https://www.tutorialspoint.com/How-to-get-a-variable-name-as-a-string-in-Python

3
  • 1
    The if statement in your code gives an error in if myvar points to another variable. However, it works beautifully if you use is`` rather than ==``. I.e. change to my_var_name = [ k for k,v in locals().items() if v is e][0] ```
    – mherzog
    Aug 22, 2020 at 13:42
  • 1
    @mherzog this "is" work, but if we want to know the pointed variable name instead of the index variable name, we may need to pick [1] or other
    – Frank
    Nov 30, 2020 at 4:16
  • is there a way of extending this to global vars instead of just locals? Mar 24, 2021 at 21:32
16
def name(**variables):
    return [x for x in variables]

It's used like this:

name(variable=variable)
4
  • 16
    This will not return the name of the desired variable, but "variables". For example - using name(variable=variable) will output ['variable'], and using name(variable=another_variable) will not output ['another_variable'] but rather ['variable'].
    – DalyaG
    May 10, 2018 at 12:33
  • 1
    Actually it works as expected. You just have to replace both «variable»s with your variable. It will return a one-element list with a string of the first variable's name. For example: >>> a = [] >>> b = a >>> name(a=b) ['a'] >>> name(b=a) ['b'] `
    – Benur21
    Nov 28, 2019 at 22:13
  • 2
    This is just a backward way of writing varname = 'variable'. The first "variable" in the name function isn't a variable but a keyword name. It's the equivalent of writing lambda name, var: name
    – Or Sharir
    Dec 4, 2020 at 13:44
  • 1
    I agree with Sharir. OP's problem is to have a function name_of, that can be use to iterate through a list and get the variable name associated with each value of the list.
    – Hugo
    Dec 11, 2020 at 13:49
14

I wrote the package sorcery to do this kind of magic robustly. You can write:

from sorcery import dict_of

columns = dict_of(n_jobs, users, queues, priorities)

and pass that to the dataframe constructor. It's equivalent to:

columns = dict(n_jobs=n_jobs, users=users, queues=queues, priorities=priorities)
3
9

Here's one approach. I wouldn't recommend this for anything important, because it'll be quite brittle. But it can be done.

Create a function that uses the inspect module to find the source code that called it. Then you can parse the source code to identify the variable names that you want to retrieve. For example, here's a function called autodict that takes a list of variables and returns a dictionary mapping variable names to their values. E.g.:

x = 'foo'
y = 'bar'
d = autodict(x, y)
print d

Would give:

{'x': 'foo', 'y': 'bar'}

Inspecting the source code itself is better than searching through the locals() or globals() because the latter approach doesn't tell you which of the variables are the ones you want.

At any rate, here's the code:

def autodict(*args):
    get_rid_of = ['autodict(', ',', ')', '\n']
    calling_code = inspect.getouterframes(inspect.currentframe())[1][4][0]
    calling_code = calling_code[calling_code.index('autodict'):]
    for garbage in get_rid_of:
        calling_code = calling_code.replace(garbage, '')
    var_names, var_values = calling_code.split(), args
    dyn_dict = {var_name: var_value for var_name, var_value in
                zip(var_names, var_values)}
    return dyn_dict

The action happens in the line with inspect.getouterframes, which returns the string within the code that called autodict.

The obvious downside to this sort of magic is that it makes assumptions about how the source code is structured. And of course, it won't work at all if it's run inside the interpreter.

1
  • 2
    Hello, I have only three questions: 1. Why "1"? 2. Why "4"? 3. Why "0"? :) Aug 29, 2019 at 14:17
9

This function will print variable name with its value:

import inspect

def print_this(var):
    callers_local_vars = inspect.currentframe().f_back.f_locals.items()
    print(str([k for k, v in callers_local_vars if v is var][0])+': '+str(var))
***Input & Function call:***
my_var = 10

print_this(my_var)

***Output**:*
my_var: 10
8
>>> locals()['foo']
{}
>>> globals()['foo']
{}

If you wanted to write your own function, it could be done such that you could check for a variable defined in locals then check globals. If nothing is found you could compare on id() to see if the variable points to the same location in memory.

If your variable is in a class, you could use className.dict.keys() or vars(self) to see if your variable has been defined.

2
  • What if the name is in a caller frame? Then you'd have to silly things like walking the stack and checking everyone's locals and globals...and you risk getting the name wrong if none actually exist. It's a ton of work for no actual useful gain.
    – nneonneo
    Aug 25, 2013 at 3:22
  • the whole question is silly...but if it's something he wanted to do, it is possible. As far as checking existence you could use Globals().setdefault(var, <new object of type(var)) to create something when nothing is there. I'm not exactly sure what he wants it for, but maybe learning that variables are kept by scope he could figure something better out.
    – blakev
    Aug 25, 2013 at 3:26
6

I have a method, and while not the most efficient...it works! (and it doesn't involve any fancy modules).

Basically it compares your Variable's ID to globals() Variables' IDs, then returns the match's name.

def getVariableName(variable, globalVariables=globals().copy()):
    """ Get Variable Name as String by comparing its ID to globals() Variables' IDs

        args:
            variable(var): Variable to find name for (Obviously this variable has to exist)

        kwargs:
            globalVariables(dict): Copy of the globals() dict (Adding to Kwargs allows this function to work properly when imported from another .py)
    """
    for globalVariable in globalVariables:
        if id(variable) == id(globalVariables[globalVariable]): # If our Variable's ID matches this Global Variable's ID...
            return globalVariable # Return its name from the Globals() dict
4

In Python, the def and class keywords will bind a specific name to the object they define (function or class). Similarly, modules are given a name by virtue of being called something specific in the filesystem. In all three cases, there's an obvious way to assign a "canonical" name to the object in question.

However, for other kinds of objects, such a canonical name may simply not exist. For example, consider the elements of a list. The elements in the list are not individually named, and it is entirely possible that the only way to refer to them in a program is by using list indices on the containing list. If such a list of objects was passed into your function, you could not possibly assign meaningful identifiers to the values.

Python doesn't save the name on the left hand side of an assignment into the assigned object because:

  1. It would require figuring out which name was "canonical" among multiple conflicting objects,
  2. It would make no sense for objects which are never assigned to an explicit variable name,
  3. It would be extremely inefficient,
  4. Literally no other language in existence does that.

So, for example, functions defined using lambda will always have the "name" <lambda>, rather than a specific function name.

The best approach would be simply to ask the caller to pass in an (optional) list of names. If typing the '...','...' is too cumbersome, you could accept e.g. a single string containing a comma-separated list of names (like namedtuple does).

4

I think it's so difficult to do this in Python because of the simple fact that you never will not know the name of the variable you're using. So, in his example, you could do:

Instead of:

list_of_dicts = [n_jobs, users, queues, priorities]

dict_of_dicts = {"n_jobs" : n_jobs, "users" : users, "queues" : queues, "priorities" : priorities}
1
  • 1
    Your first sentence doesn't make sense - is there an extra not?
    – jtlz2
    Jun 18, 2021 at 8:42
4

Many of the answers return just one variable name. But that won't work well if more than one variable have the same value. Here's a variation of Amr Sharaki's answer which returns multiple results if more variables have the same value.

def getVariableNames(variable):
    results = []
    globalVariables=globals().copy()
    for globalVariable in globalVariables:
        if id(variable) == id(globalVariables[globalVariable]):
            results.append(globalVariable)
    return results

a = 1
b = 1
getVariableNames(a)
# ['a', 'b']
3

just another way to do this based on the content of input variable:

(it returns the name of the first variable that matches to the input variable, otherwise None. One can modify it to get all variable names which are having the same content as input variable)

def retrieve_name(x, Vars=vars()):
    for k in Vars:
        if isinstance(x, type(Vars[k])):
            if x is Vars[k]:
                return k
    return None
2

If the goal is to help you keep track of your variables, you can write a simple function that labels the variable and returns its value and type. For example, suppose i_f=3.01 and you round it to an integer called i_n to use in a code, and then need a string i_s that will go into a report.

def whatis(string, x):
    print(string+' value=',repr(x),type(x))
    return string+' value='+repr(x)+repr(type(x))
i_f=3.01
i_n=int(i_f)
i_s=str(i_n)
i_l=[i_f, i_n, i_s]
i_u=(i_f, i_n, i_s)

## make report that identifies all types
report='\n'+20*'#'+'\nThis is the report:\n'
report+= whatis('i_f ',i_f)+'\n'
report+=whatis('i_n ',i_n)+'\n'
report+=whatis('i_s ',i_s)+'\n'
report+=whatis('i_l ',i_l)+'\n'
report+=whatis('i_u ',i_u)+'\n'
print(report)

This prints to the window at each call for debugging purposes and also yields a string for the written report. The only downside is that you have to type the variable twice each time you call the function.

I am a Python newbie and found this very useful way to log my efforts as I program and try to cope with all the objects in Python. One flaw is that whatis() fails if it calls a function described outside the procedure where it is used. For example, int(i_f) was a valid function call only because the int function is known to Python. You could call whatis() using int(i_f**2), but if for some strange reason you choose to define a function called int_squared it must be declared inside the procedure where whatis() is used.

2

Maybe this could be useful:

def Retriever(bar):
    return (list(globals().keys()))[list(map(lambda x: id(x), list(globals().values()))).index(id(bar))]

The function goes through the list of IDs of values from the global scope (the namespace could be edited), finds the index of the wanted/required var or function based on its ID, and then returns the name from the list of global names based on the acquired index.

2
  • Incredibly scary looking but it works and it works pretty fast. 4.41 us +/- 1.2 us per loop (mean +/- std. dev. of 7 runs, 100000 loops each for just one variable and function. Runtime does increase slowly as defined variable count increases. 21us with 103 defined in iPython. Probably not ideal for very large environments but maybe there’s a way to optimize…? Feb 8, 2022 at 15:00
  • Ok, there appears to be some drawbacks with this. Take for example two variables assigned the value of 0 and they’re assigned to a tuple, ie t = (var1, var2). While it’s possible to use this to get the variable name assigned to a tuple slot, the slot for var2 will return a variable name of var1. I believe this is because constants are pre-generated and assigned a slot in memory as an optimization technique, so the reverse lookup will point to the oldest existing variable assigned the value. As a result, I don’t recommend using this for large projects due to the issue of inaccuracy. Feb 8, 2022 at 17:03
2

Whenever I have to do it, mostly while communicating json schema and constants with the frontend I define a class as follows

class Param:
    def __init__(self, name, value):
        self.name = name
        self.value = value

Then define the variable with name and value.

frame_folder_count = Param({'name':'frame_folder_count', 'value':10})

Now you can access the name and value using the object.

>>> frame_folder_count.name
'frame_folder_count'
2
  • I don't think that this matches the question. But anyway I want to suggest you using pydantic, it's really good for that type of usage
    – ccvhd
    Apr 2, 2021 at 8:17
  • Your code doesn't run. should be on the lines of Param('frame_folder_count', 10) or Param(**{'name':'frame_folder_count', 'value':10})
    – gonzalo mr
    Oct 4, 2021 at 11:15
2
>>> def varname(v, scope=None):
        d = globals() if not scope else vars(scope); return [k for k in d if d[k] == v]
...
>>> d1 = {'a': 'ape'}; d2 = {'b': 'bear'}; d3 = {'c': 'cat'}
>>> ld = [d1, d2, d3]
>>> [varname(d) for d in ld]
[['d1'], ['d2'], ['d3']]
>>> d5 = d3
>>> [varname(d) for d in ld]
[['d1'], ['d2'], ['d3', 'd5']]
>>> def varname(v, scope=None):
        d = globals() if not scope else vars(scope); return [k for k in d if d[k] is v]
...
>>> [varname(d) for d in ld]
[['d1'], ['d2'], ['d3', 'd5']]

As you see and is noted here, there can be multiple variables with the same value or even address, so using a wrapper to keep the names with the data is best.

2
  • I get RuntimeError: dictionary changed size during iteration Oct 8, 2021 at 13:01
  • @étale-cohomology Works fine here: >>> import sys;sys.version '3.8.5 (tags/v3.8.5:580fbb0, Jul 20 2020, 15:57:54) [MSC v.1924 64 bit (AMD64)]' Oct 10, 2021 at 22:41
2

How can I do the same for a variable? As opposed to functions, Python variables do not have the __name__ attribute.

The problem comes up because you are confused about terminology, semantics or both.

"variables" don't belong in the same category as "functions". A "variable" is not a thing that takes up space in memory while the code is running. It is just a name that exists in your source code - so that when you're writing the code, you can explain which thing you're talking about. Python uses names in the source code to refer to (i.e., give a name to) values. (In many languages, a variable is more like a name for a specific location in memory where the value will be stored. But Python's names actually name the thing in question.)

In Python, a function is a value. (In some languages, this is not the case; although there are bytes of memory used to represent the actual executable code, it isn't a discrete chunk of memory that your program logic gets to interact with directly.) In Python, every value is an object, meaning that you can assign names to it freely, pass it as an argument, return it from a function, etc. (In many languages, this is not the case.) Objects in Python have attributes, which are the things you access using the . syntax. Functions in Python have a __name__ attribute, which is assigned when the function is created. Specifically, when a def statement is executed (in most languages, creation of a function works quite differently), the name that appears after def is used as a value for the __name__ attribute, and also, independently, as a variable name that will get the function object assigned to it.

But most objects don't have an attribute like that.

To illustrate:

Statement Binds variable to value Sets attribute on object
def f f<function> <function>.__name__ = 'f'
x = 0 x0 not applicable

In other words, if I have a variable such as:

That's the thing: you don't "have" the variable in the sense that you're thinking of. You have the object that is named by that variable. Anything else depends on the information incidentally being stored in some other object - such as the locals() of the enclosing function. But it would be better to store the information yourself. Instead of relying on a variable name to carry information for you, explicitly build the mapping between the string name you want to use for the object, and the object itself.

1

Following method will not return the name of variable but using this method you can create data frame easily if variable is available in global scope.

class CustomDict(dict):
    def __add__(self, other):
        return CustomDict({**self, **other})

class GlobalBase(type):
    def __getattr__(cls, key):
        return CustomDict({key: globals()[key]})

    def __getitem__(cls, keys):
        return CustomDict({key: globals()[key] for key in keys})

class G(metaclass=GlobalBase):
    pass

x, y, z = 0, 1, 2

print('method 1:', G['x', 'y', 'z']) # Outcome: method 1: {'x': 0, 'y': 1, 'z': 2}
print('method 2:', G.x + G.y + G.z) # Outcome: method 2: {'x': 0, 'y': 1, 'z': 2}

A = [0, 1]
B = [1, 2]
pd.DataFrame(G.A + G.B) # It will return a data frame with A and B columns
1

Some of the previous cases would fail if there are two variables with the same value. So it is convenient to alert it:

Defining function:

# Variable to string of variable name

def var_name(variable,i=0):

  results = []
  for name in globals():   
     if eval(name) == variable:
       results.append(name)

  if len(results) > 1:
    print('Warning:' )
    print('   var_name() has found',len(results), 'possible outcomes.')
    print('   Please choose the suitable parameter "i". Where "i" is the index')
    print('   that matches your choice from the list below.')
    print('  ',results) ; print('')

  return results[i]

Use:

var_1 = 10
var_name(var_1) # Output will be "var_1"

If you have 2 variables with the same value like var_1 = 8 and var_2 = 8, then a warning will appear.

var_1 = 8
var_2 = 8
var_name(var_2)  # Output will be "var_1" too but Warning will appear
1

You can get your variable as kwargs and return it as string:

var=2
def getVarName(**kwargs):
    return list(kwargs.keys())[0]

print (getVarName(var = var))

Note: variable name must be equal to itself.

2
  • This answer is so underrated! Works beautifully with var=None, var='', var=_ ... . Tried with globals() and .__repr__ and id() and ... which didn't work with the odd test variables. Well answered!
    – user319436
    Dec 4, 2022 at 3:28
  • Not working, s. print([getVarName(v=v) for v in [v1, v2, v3]])
    – Jaja
    Mar 3, 2023 at 10:55
0

I try to get name from inspect locals, but it cann't process var likes a[1], b.val. After it, I got a new idea --- get var name from the code, and I try it succ! code like below:

#direct get from called function code
def retrieve_name_ex(var):
    stacks = inspect.stack()
    try:
        func = stacks[0].function
        code = stacks[1].code_context[0]
        s = code.index(func)
        s = code.index("(", s + len(func)) + 1
        e = code.index(")", s)
        return code[s:e].strip()
    except:
        return ""
0

You can try the following to retrieve the name of a function you defined (does not work for built-in functions though):

import re
def retrieve_name(func):
    return re.match("<function\s+(\w+)\s+at.*", str(func)).group(1)

def foo(x):
    return x**2

print(retrieve_name(foo))
# foo
0

When finding the name of a variable from its value,
you may have several variables equal to the same value,
for example var1 = 'hello' and var2 = 'hello'.

My solution:

def find_var_name(val):

    dict_list = []
    global_dict = dict(globals())

    for k, v in global_dict.items():
        dict_list.append([k, v])
   
    return [item[0] for item in dict_list if item[1] == val]

var1 = 'hello'
var2 = 'hello'
find_var_name('hello')

Outputs

['var1', 'var2']
0

Compressed version of iDilip's answer:

import inspect
def varname(x):
  return [k for k,v in inspect.currentframe().f_back.f_locals.items() if v is x][0]

hi = 123
print(varname(hi))
1
  • this is only correct if you only need one. the original answer returns all the matching vars.
    – FrankZhu
    Jun 27, 2022 at 20:41
0

It's totally possible to get the name of an instance variable, so long as it is the property of a class.

I got this from Effective Python by Brett Slatkin. Hope it helps someone:

The class must implement the get, set, and set_name dunder methods, which are part of the "Descriptor Protocol"

This worked when I ran it:

class FieldThatKnowsItsName():
    def __init__(self):
        self.name = None
        self._value= None
        self.owner = None
 
    def __set_name__(self, owner, name):
        self.name = name
        self.owner = owner
        self.owner.fields[self.name] = self

    def __get__(self, instance, instance_type):
        return self

    def __set__(self, instance, value):
        self = value

class SuperTable:
    fields = {}
    field_1=FieldThatKnowsItsName()
    field_2=FieldThatKnowsItsName()

table = SuperTable()
print(table.field_1.name)
print(table.field_2.name)

You can then add methods and or extend your datatype as you like.

As a bonus, the set_name(self, owner, name) dunder also passes the parent instance, so the Field class instance can register itself with the parent.

I got this from Effective Python by Brett Slatkin. It took a while to figure out how to implement.

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