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Overwrite global var in one line in Python?

Tags:

python

I know that I can write:

foo = 'bar'
def update_foo():
  global foo
  foo = 'baz'

But do I really need two lines of code there? Python, alas, won't allow me to say

global foo = 'baz'

I could also mash the two lines together with the unfortunately repetitive

global foo; foo = 'baz'

Any other shortcuts? I'm on Python 2.6.5, but I'd be curious to hear responses for Python 3 as well.

like image 702
Trevor Burnham Avatar asked Jun 21 '10 23:06

Trevor Burnham


1 Answers

You could use my favorite alternative to global (a pretty idiosyncratic taste...):

import sys
thismodule = sys.modules[__name__]
thismodule.foo = 'bar'

def update_foo():
  thismodule.foo = 'baz'

Once you've made the thismodule reference, you don't need to use global in this module, because you're always working with qualified names rather than bare names (a much better idea IMHO... but maybe in MHO only, I've not been able to convince Guido to supply thismodule [[or some other identifier with this functionality]] back when Python 3 was gestating).

Note that the first assignment to foo, at global level, can be done either with this explicit syntax, or by assigning to barename foo as you do in your code (I guess it's not surprising that my preference goes to the explicit form, though, in this case, just barely).

like image 89
Alex Martelli Avatar answered Oct 18 '22 15:10

Alex Martelli