Anonymous Quiz
31%
list()
45%
[ ]
5%
Same speed
19%
Depends on list size
Anonymous Quiz
14%
set
13%
dict
59%
array
13%
tuple
Feels off?
It's because all your objects share one variable (without you realizing it)
At first glance, it seems like every object should start fresh, right? But in this case, count is a class variable, which means itβs shared by all instances of the class.
Every time you create a new
If your goal is to give each object its own value, define it like this instead
Now, each instance has its own count, stored on the object itself . no sharing, no surprises.
It's because all your objects share one variable (without you realizing it)
At first glance, it seems like every object should start fresh, right? But in this case, count is a class variable, which means itβs shared by all instances of the class.
Every time you create a new
Counter()
, youβre actually incrementing the same shared variable not something unique to each object.If your goal is to give each object its own value, define it like this instead
class Counter:
def __init__(self):
self.count = 1
Now, each instance has its own count, stored on the object itself . no sharing, no surprises.
β€2
β€3
Looks neat, right? But letβs slow down.
The
The starred variable always gets a list, and it can be empty so plan accordingly when unpacking, especially in function arguments or loops.
For example: Consider the following code
No error, but
The
*b
syntax is called extended iterable unpacking. It grabs everything in the middle of the list, leaving the first item (a) and the last (c) outside the star. This pattern is super handy, but can also behave unexpectedly if you assume itβll grab just one item or not consider the structure of the data.The starred variable always gets a list, and it can be empty so plan accordingly when unpacking, especially in function arguments or loops.
For example: Consider the following code
x, *y = [42]
print(y) # []
No error, but
y
is just an empty list! Unpacking doesnβt always fill every name the way you might guess.β€1π1
Given the above Python code, what will be printed?
Anonymous Quiz
10%
"hello"
75%
"olleh"
10%
"" (empty string)
5%
Error
β€1