It lets you decide which parameter you want to pass regardless of the order it appears on the function declaration or of how many other there are (assuming they have default values).
When you call a function with multiple parameters, normally, it will take said parameters on the same order they were declared. Specifying which parameter you are trying to pass allow you to ignore that order and pass any parameter in any position.
For instance, let's say we have a simple function that returns the current process id formatted and it simply takes a prefix and a suffix and puts the process id on the middle:
import os
def format_pid(prefix="", suffix=""):
return f"{prefix}{os.getpid()}{suffix}"
Now, if I call that function like this:
print(format_pid(" before ", " after "))
It works like you would expect and outputs this:
before 458496 after
But if I specify the parameters I want to use, I can actually make it take the parameters in reverse order:
print(format_pid(suffix=" before ", prefix=" after "))
Output:
after 458496 before
But the true usefulness of it comes when you have function that can take multiple parameters, but you only want to pass one. For instance, if I do:
print(format_pid(" -- "))
It automatically considers that parameter as being the prefix:
-- 458496
But if I want it to be the suffix, I can do this:
print(format_pid(suffix=" -- "))
Output:
458496 --
It may seem trivial, but this is actually a lifesaver when it comes to functions that take many parameters but are usually called with only a few of them or when you have a funtion that takes a variable amount of inputs but you still want to put some optional ones at the end (at the beginning it would force the user to pass them every single time).
A good example for this is the good old print
funcion. Look at its declaration:
print(...)
print(value, ..., sep=' ', end='\n', file=sys.stdout, flush=False)
Prints the values to a stream, or to sys.stdout by default.
Optional keyword arguments:
file: a file-like object (stream); defaults to the current sys.stdout.
sep: string inserted between values, default a space.
end: string appended after the last value, default a newline.
flush: whether to forcibly flush the stream.
It has four optional parameters that we barely worry about, except for more specific situations where we actually want to change them, in which case we specify one on the function calling:
print("I am fine", "What about you", sep=". ", end="?\n")
Output:
I am fine. What about you?