2

I found something that doesn't make sense to me. I am hoping that someone can explain it.

def test(word):
    total = 0
    for l in word:
        print l

test('python')

The result is 'p y t h o n' (each letter appears on its own line).

def test(word):
    total = 0
    for l in word:
        print l
    return total

test('python')

The result is just 'p'.

How come adding a return statement has this effect? Shouldn't both blocks of code do that same thing? Does this mean that it goes through the for loop only once and then executes the return statement?

3
  • there is not increment of value in total variable. Jan 19, 2015 at 9:30
  • 3
    are you sure your return is not indented like your print l?
    – dmg
    Jan 19, 2015 at 9:31
  • The return statement should not affect the code here. I cannot reproduce the problem. Are you sure that there is nothing else that prevents printing the characters? Jan 19, 2015 at 9:32

3 Answers 3

8

The only way you'd get the behaviour you see is if you indented return total to be part of the for loop. If it doesn't look like that in your editor, it's because you have used a TAB character for your return line:

>>> code_as_posted = '''\
... def test(word):
...     total = 0
...     for l in word:
...         print l
...     return total
... '''
>>> code_as_posted.splitlines()[-1]
'\treturn total'

See that \t character escape there? That's a tab character, which expands to up to 8 spaces when interpreted by Python; see Indentation in the Python reference documentation:

First, tabs are replaced (from left to right) by one to eight spaces such that the total number of characters up to and including the replacement is a multiple of eight (this is intended to be the same rule as used by Unix). The total number of spaces preceding the first non-blank character then determines the line’s indentation.

As the return exits the loop early, you only ever see the 'p' character printed.

Both your editor and the Stack Overflow Markdown implementation display tabs as four spaces instead, so it was really hard to spot this specific error here. Run Python with the -tt command line switch to raise exceptions on mixed tab-and-spaces use.

You need to configure your editor to expand tabs to spaces, or use tabs exclusively. Don't mix the two styles. The Python Style Guide strongly recommends you use spaces only:

Spaces are the preferred indentation method.

Tabs should be used solely to remain consistent with code that is already indented with tabs.

Many editors can also make tabs explicitly visible. In Sublime Text, when you select text, spaces are shown as dimmed dots, tabs as a line:

Sublime Text editor with code from OP selected; the tab on the return line is visible as a line, spaces are shown as subtle grey dots

3
  • Yes. You are right. Thank you so much. I spent an hour on this before even posting it. Sorry to bother you
    – user2806040
    Jan 19, 2015 at 9:46
  • "The usual advice, to run Python with -tt to raise exceptions on mixed tab-and-spaces use, also doesn't catch this specific example." - you sure about that? -tt catches the problem when I try it. Jan 29, 2016 at 0:08
  • @user2357112: hrm, not sure what went wrong with my test then; it indeed is reported when I retest now.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Jan 29, 2016 at 7:33
6

I am 100% sure that return total in the second function is on the same level (indented exactly) as print. Probably you use mixed space characters (tab or space).

1
  • Yes. You are right. Thank you so much. I spent an hour on this before even posting it. Sorry to bother you
    – user2806040
    Jan 19, 2015 at 9:45
0

Adding on to others' diagnoses, for a new Python programmer I would suggest the obvious and recommend that they use IDLE to develop their applications. It should be bundled with your interpreter, and it comes out-of-the-box with automatic tab expansion to spaces, as well as other useful Python developing features such as automatic indenting after if/for/def/class etc. statements, multi-line indenting and unindenting (ctrl [/]), and program quick launch with F5. It may be easier to use that than to configure another text editor to recognize Python idioms, and definitely easier to use than notepad or the REPL.

I would also suggest that when you run scripts from the command line, use the python -tt option, as so:

C:\file\python -tt myscript.py

This option scans the code for mixing of tabs and spaces, and raises an Exception if it encounters one. Note that this is a mandatory feature in Python 3, so using this option can help you future-proof your code.

2
  • 2
    The indentation is not mixed, there are no spaces on that line. -tt doesn't catch this case. If you replace print l with `print(l) you'll notice the code, as posted, runs fine in Python 3.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Jan 19, 2015 at 10:14
  • 1
    IDLE works and is a nice first editor, but it has its quirks and problems. Try printing a very large string, for example. There are issues with BeautifulSoup and unicode (infinite recursions galore) and the Tkinter GUI is very clunky. I'd not recommend it that highly.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Jan 19, 2015 at 10:15