145

For simplicity this is a stripped down version of what I want to do:

def foo(a):
    # I want to print the value of the variable
    # the name of which is contained in a

I know how to do this in PHP:

function foo($a) {
    echo $$a;
}

global $string = "blah"; // might not need to be global but that's irrelevant
foo("string"); // prints "blah"

Any way to do this?

0

4 Answers 4

231

If it's a global variable, then you can do:

>>> a = 5
>>> globals()['a']
5

A note about the various "eval" solutions: you should be careful with eval, especially if the string you're evaluating comes from a potentially untrusted source -- otherwise, you might end up deleting the entire contents of your disk or something like that if you're given a malicious string.

(If it's not global, then you'll need access to whatever namespace it's defined in. If you don't have that, there's no way you'll be able to access it.)

1
  • 92
    locals() for locals. Feb 24, 2012 at 20:49
83

Edward Loper's answer only works if the variable is in the current module. To get a value in another module, you can use getattr:

import other
print getattr(other, "name_of_variable")

https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#getattr

3
  • 8
    And if you want to use this method to get a value in the same module that you are calling getattr(), use import sys; sys.modules[__name__] to get a reference to the current module.
    – Dirk
    Mar 17, 2016 at 12:38
  • 1
    do you have an alternative for python3? Dec 18, 2019 at 9:49
  • @GuillermoMosse no, it should be the same: docs.python.org/3.8/library/functions.html#getattr
    – eresonance
    Dec 19, 2019 at 14:41
51

Assuming that you know the string is safe to evaluate, then eval will give the value of the variable in the current context.

>>> string = "blah"
>>> string
'blah'
>>> x = "string"
>>> eval(x)
'blah'
1
20
>>> x=5
>>> print eval('x')
5

tada!

4

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