To delete a variable, along with its value, use Remove-Variable or Remove-Item . This cmdlet does not delete the values of variables that are set as constants or owned by the system, even if you use the Force parameter.
Just like the del method, you can invoke the gc. collect() for clearing the memory of not just variables but for all Python objects. Thus, you can use a combination of del() and gc. collect() to clear the variable from Python memory.
to clear Memory in Python just use del. By using del you can clear the memory which is you are not wanting. By using del you can clear variables, arrays, lists etc.
The del
keyword would do.
>>> a=1
>>> a
1
>>> del a
>>> a
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
NameError: name 'a' is not defined
But in this case I vote for self.left = None
What's wrong with self.left = None
?
var = None
"clears the value", setting the value of the variable to "null" like value of "None", however the pointer to the variable remains.
del var
removes the definition for the variable totally.
In case you want to use the variable later, e.g. set a new value for it, i.e. retain the variable, None
would be better.
Actually, that does not delete the variable/property. All it will do is set its value to None
, therefore the variable will still take up space in memory. If you want to completely wipe all existence of the variable from memory, you can just type:
del self.left
If want to totally delete it use del
:
del your_variable
Or otherwise, to make the value None
:
your_variable = None
If it's a mutable iterable (lists, sets, dictionaries, etc, but not tuples because they're immutable), you can make it empty like:
your_variable.clear()
Then your_variable
will be empty
Do you want to delete a variable, don't you?
ok, I think I've got a best alternative idea to @bnaul's answer:
You can delete individual names with del
:
del x
or you can remove them from the globals()
object:
for name in dir():
if not name.startswith('_'):
del globals()[name]
This is just an example loop; it defensively only deletes names that do not start with an underscore, making a (not unreasoned) assumption that you only used names without an underscore at the start in your interpreter. You could use a hard-coded list of names to keep instead (whitelisting) if you really wanted to be thorough. There is no built-in function to do the clearing for you, other than just exit and restart the interpreter.
Modules you've imported (like import os
) are going to remain imported because they are referenced by sys.modules
; subsequent imports will reuse the already imported module object. You just won't have a reference to them in your current global namespace.
Delete its contents by setting it to None
and then del
to remove its pointer from memory
variable = None; del variable
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With