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What is the difference between this:

a, b = b, a+b

And this:

a = b
b = a+b

I'm trying to follow along in the examples in the documentation and the first form (multiple assignment syntax) seems complicated to me. I tried to simplify it with the second example but it's not giving the same results. I'm clearly interpreting the first statement wrong. What am I missing?

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1 Answer 1

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Multiple assignment evaluates the values of everything on the right hand side before changing any of the values of the left hand side.

In other words, the difference is this:

a = 1
b = 2
a = b                  # a = 2
b = a + b              # b = 2 + 2

vs. this:

a = 1
b = 2
a, b = b, a + b        # a, b = 2, 1 + 2

Another way of thinking about it is that it's the equivalent of constructing a tuple and then deconstructing it again (which is actually exactly what's going on, except without an explicit intermediate tuple):

a = 1
b = 2
_tuple = (b, a+b)
a = _tuple[0]
b = _tuple[1]
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  • You might wanna illustrate your second example with the use use of a tmp variable
    – jamylak
    Apr 3, 2013 at 4:33
  • @jamylak That is what _tuple is.
    – Amber
    Apr 3, 2013 at 5:06

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