Yes, all variables increase memory usage. This is because references need to store the memory address of what they refer to. However, references use a negligible about of memory (4 bytes on a 32-bit machine, 8 bytes on a 64-bit machine) compared to copying/creating a new list. Please see Ned Batchelder
's article on how this all works.
To answer your question on whether or not a copy of the list will be made: no. Whenever you assign a variable to another variable of an object, the object is not copied. As chepner answered in a comment on your question, abc
and result['abc']
both point to the same list, so the list is not copied in memory.
(For future visitors: The original question has many comments that may be useful. If you can, I recommend you read through those too.)
''
around dictionary keys?abc
refers to the exact samelist
object asresult['abc']
. You should read nedbatchelder.com/text/names.html.result['abc']
andabc
to be references to the same list. Variables are just names for references. Assigning to a name never makes a copy of the object being assigned to the list.