Python assigning multiple variables to same value? list behavior

PythonList

Python Problem Overview


I tried to use multiple assignment as show below to initialize variables, but I got confused by the behavior, I expect to reassign the values list separately, I mean b[0] and c[0] equal 0 as before.

a=b=c=[0,3,5]
a[0]=1
print(a)
print(b)
print(c)

Result is: [1, 3, 5] [1, 3, 5] [1, 3, 5]

Is that correct? what should I use for multiple assignment? what is different from this?

d=e=f=3
e=4
print('f:',f)
print('e:',e)

result: ('f:', 3) ('e:', 4)

Python Solutions


Solution 1 - Python

If you're coming to Python from a language in the C/Java/etc. family, it may help you to stop thinking about a as a "variable", and start thinking of it as a "name".

a, b, and c aren't different variables with equal values; they're different names for the same identical value. Variables have types, identities, addresses, and all kinds of stuff like that.

Names don't have any of that. Values do, of course, and you can have lots of names for the same value.

If you give Notorious B.I.G. a hot dog,* Biggie Smalls and Chris Wallace have a hot dog. If you change the first element of a to 1, the first elements of b and c are 1.

If you want to know if two names are naming the same object, use the is operator:

>>> a=b=c=[0,3,5]
>>> a is b
True

You then ask:

> what is different from this?

d=e=f=3
e=4
print('f:',f)
print('e:',e)

Here, you're rebinding the name e to the value 4. That doesn't affect the names d and f in any way.

In your previous version, you were assigning to a[0], not to a. So, from the point of view of a[0], you're rebinding a[0], but from the point of view of a, you're changing it in-place.

You can use the id function, which gives you some unique number representing the identity of an object, to see exactly which object is which even when is can't help:

>>> a=b=c=[0,3,5]
>>> id(a)
4473392520
>>> id(b)
4473392520
>>> id(a[0])
4297261120
>>> id(b[0])
4297261120

>>> a[0] = 1
>>> id(a)
4473392520
>>> id(b)
4473392520
>>> id(a[0])
4297261216
>>> id(b[0])
4297261216

Notice that a[0] has changed from 4297261120 to 4297261216—it's now a name for a different value. And b[0] is also now a name for that same new value. That's because a and b are still naming the same object.


Under the covers, a[0]=1 is actually calling a method on the list object. (It's equivalent to a.__setitem__(0, 1).) So, it's not really rebinding anything at all. It's like calling my_object.set_something(1). Sure, likely the object is rebinding an instance attribute in order to implement this method, but that's not what's important; what's important is that you're not assigning anything, you're just mutating the object. And it's the same with a[0]=1.


user570826 asked:

> What if we have, a = b = c = 10

That's exactly the same situation as a = b = c = [1, 2, 3]: you have three names for the same value.

But in this case, the value is an int, and ints are immutable. In either case, you can rebind a to a different value (e.g., a = "Now I'm a string!"), but the won't affect the original value, which b and c will still be names for. The difference is that with a list, you can change the value [1, 2, 3] into [1, 2, 3, 4] by doing, e.g., a.append(4); since that's actually changing the value that b and c are names for, b will now b [1, 2, 3, 4]. There's no way to change the value 10 into anything else. 10 is 10 forever, just like Claudia the vampire is 5 forever (at least until she's replaced by Kirsten Dunst).


* Warning: Do not give Notorious B.I.G. a hot dog. Gangsta rap zombies should never be fed after midnight.

Solution 2 - Python

Cough cough

>>> a,b,c = (1,2,3)
>>> a
1
>>> b
2
>>> c
3
>>> a,b,c = ({'test':'a'},{'test':'b'},{'test':'c'})
>>> a
{'test': 'a'}
>>> b
{'test': 'b'}
>>> c
{'test': 'c'}
>>> 

Solution 3 - Python

In python, everything is an object, also "simple" variables types (int, float, etc..).

When you changes a variable value, you actually changes it's pointer, and if you compares between two variables it's compares their pointers. (To be clear, pointer is the address in physical computer memory where a variable is stored).

As a result, when you changes an inner variable value, you changes it's value in the memory and it's affects all the variables that point to this address.

For your example, when you do:

a = b =  5 

This means that a and b points to the same address in memory that contains the value 5, but when you do:

a = 6

It's not affect b because a is now points to another memory location that contains 6 and b still points to the memory address that contains 5.

But, when you do:

a = b = [1,2,3]

a and b, again, points to the same location but the difference is that if you change the one of the list values:

a[0] = 2

It's changes the value of the memory that a is points on, but a is still points to the same address as b, and as a result, b changes as well.

Solution 4 - Python

Yes, that's the expected behavior. a, b and c are all set as labels for the same list. If you want three different lists, you need to assign them individually. You can either repeat the explicit list, or use one of the numerous ways to copy a list:

b = a[:] # this does a shallow copy, which is good enough for this case
import copy
c = copy.deepcopy(a) # this does a deep copy, which matters if the list contains mutable objects

Assignment statements in Python do not copy objects - they bind the name to an object, and an object can have as many labels as you set. In your first edit, changing a[0], you're updating one element of the single list that a, b, and c all refer to. In your second, changing e, you're switching e to be a label for a different object (4 instead of 3).

Solution 5 - Python

You can use id(name) to check if two names represent the same object:

>>> a = b = c = [0, 3, 5]
>>> print(id(a), id(b), id(c))
46268488 46268488 46268488

Lists are mutable; it means you can change the value in place without creating a new object. However, it depends on how you change the value:

>>> a[0] = 1
>>> print(id(a), id(b), id(c))
46268488 46268488 46268488
>>> print(a, b, c)
[1, 3, 5] [1, 3, 5] [1, 3, 5]

If you assign a new list to a, then its id will change, so it won't affect b and c's values:

>>> a = [1, 8, 5]
>>> print(id(a), id(b), id(c))
139423880 46268488 46268488
>>> print(a, b, c)
[1, 8, 5] [1, 3, 5] [1, 3, 5]

Integers are immutable, so you cannot change the value without creating a new object:

>>> x = y = z = 1
>>> print(id(x), id(y), id(z))
507081216 507081216 507081216
>>> x = 2
>>> print(id(x), id(y), id(z))
507081248 507081216 507081216
>>> print(x, y, z)
2 1 1

Solution 6 - Python

in your first example a = b = c = [1, 2, 3] you are really saying:

 'a' is the same as 'b', is the same as 'c' and they are all [1, 2, 3]

If you want to set 'a' equal to 1, 'b' equal to '2' and 'c' equal to 3, try this:

a, b, c = [1, 2, 3]

print(a)
--> 1
print(b)
--> 2
print(c)
--> 3

Hope this helps!

Solution 7 - Python

Simply put, in the first case, you are assigning multiple names to a list. Only one copy of list is created in memory and all names refer to that location. So changing the list using any of the names will actually modify the list in memory.

In the second case, multiple copies of same value are created in memory. So each copy is independent of one another.

Solution 8 - Python

What you need is this:

a, b, c = [0,3,5] # Unpack the list, now a, b, and c are ints
a = 1             # `a` did equal 0, not [0,3,5]
print(a)
print(b)
print(c)

Solution 9 - Python

The code that does what I need could be this:

# test

aux=[[0 for n in range(3)] for i in range(4)]
print('aux:',aux)

# initialization

a,b,c,d=[[0 for n in range(3)] for i in range(4)]

# changing values

a[0]=1
d[2]=5
print('a:',a)
print('b:',b)
print('c:',c)
print('d:',d)

Result:

('aux:', [[0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 0]])
('a:', [1, 0, 0])
('b:', [0, 0, 0])
('c:', [0, 0, 0])
('d:', [0, 0, 5])

Solution 10 - Python

The behavior is correct. However, all the variables will share the same reference. Please note the behavior below:

>>> a = b = c = [0,1,2]
>>> a
[0, 1, 2]
>>> b
[0, 1, 2]
>>> c 
[0, 1, 2]
>>> a[0]=1000
>>> a
[1000, 1, 2]
>>> b
[1000, 1, 2]
>>> c
[1000, 1, 2]

So, yes, it is different in the sense that if you assign a, b and c differently on a separate line, changing one will not change the others.

Solution 11 - Python

To assign multiple variables same value I prefer list

a, b, c = [10]*3#multiplying 3 because we have 3 variables
print(a, type(a), b, type(b), c, type(c))

output:

10 <class 'int'> 10 <class 'int'> 10 <class 'int'>

Initialize multiple objects:

import datetime

time1, time2, time3 = [datetime.datetime.now()]*3

print(time1)
print(time2)
print(time3)

output:

2022-02-25 11:52:59.064487
2022-02-25 11:52:59.064487
2022-02-25 11:52:59.064487

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionMarcoView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - PythonabarnertView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - PythonJimmy KaneView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - PythonOri SeriView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - PythonPeter DeGlopperView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - PythonjurgenrezaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - PythonNick BurnsView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - PythonVikasView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - PythonpydsignerView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - PythonMarcoView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 10 - PythonYigit AlparslanView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 11 - PythonUdesh RanjanView Answer on Stackoverflow