In JavaScript each function has a special arguments
predefined objects which holds information about arguments passed to the function call, e.g.
function test() {
var args = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments);
console.log(args);
}
arguments can be easily dumped to a standard array:
test()
// []
test(1,2,3)
// [1, 2, 3]
test("hello", 123, {}, [], function(){})
// ["hello", 123, Object, Array[0], function]
I know that in Python I can use standard arguments, positional arguments and keyword arguments (just like defined here) to manage dynamic parameter number - but is there anything similar to arguments
object in Python?
*args
and**kwargs
, but those only give you "extra" arguments, not all arguments. There is somewhat less need forarguments
in Python because (unlike Javascript) it's not possible to call a function with the wrong number of arguments (i.e., if a function requires two arguments, calling it with just one will give an error). What do you want to accomplish that makes you want to use something likearguments
?arguments
, e.g. you can make a standardmemoize
function with one parameter (which is a function to be memoized) which will return closured memoized function. This is done usingarguments
, as you can see here (see chapter automatic memoization).arguments
, as I can see. Thanks.