I have the following code:
 funcs = []
 for i in range(10):
   def func():
      print i
   funcs.append(func)
 for f in funcs:
   f()
The problem is that func is being overriden. Ie the output of the code is:
9
9
9
...
How would you solve this without defining new functions?
The optimal solution would be to change the name of the function. Ie:
for i in range(10):
   def func+i():
...
(or some other weird syntax)
The problem is not that func is being overwritten, it's that the value of i is being evaluated when the function is called, not when it is defined.  If you want to evaluate i at definition time, put it in the function declaration, as a default argument to func.  
funcs = []
for i in range(10):
    def func(value=i):
        print value
    funcs.append(func)
for f in funcs:
    f()
Default arguments are evaluated once, when the function is defined, so the incrementing loop will not affect them. This would work just as well if you used
def func(i=i):
    print i
but I used the name value to make it clear which name is being used within the function.
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