[Python-ideas] Explicit variable capture list
Devin Jeanpierre
jeanpierreda at gmail.com
Tue Jan 19 09:39:17 EST 2016
On Tue, Jan 19, 2016 at 6:10 AM, <haael at interia.pl> wrote:
>
>
> Hi
>
> C++ has a nice feature of explicit variable capture list for lambdas:
>
> int a = 1, b = 2, c = 3;
> auto fun = [a, b, c](int x, int y){ return a + b + c + x + y};
>
> This allows easy construction of closures. In Python to achieve that, you need to say:
This is worded very confusingly. Python has easy construction of
closures with implicit variable capture.
The difference has to do with "value semantics" in C++, which Python
doesn't have. If you were using int* variables in your C++ example,
you'd have the same semantics as Python does with its int references.
> def make_closure(a, b, c):
> def fun(x, y):
> return a + b + c + x + y
> return def
> a = 1
> b = 2
> c = 3
> fun = make_closure(a, b, c)
The usual workaround is actually:
a = 1
b = 1
c = 1
def fun(x, y, a=a, b=b, c=c):
return a + b + c + x + y
-- Devin
More information about the Python-ideas
mailing list