Python 3: starred expression to unpack a list

Question:

Example use:

def f(a, b, c, d): 
    print(a, b, c, d, sep = '&')

f(1,2,3,4)
>>> 1&2&3&4

f(*[1, 2, 3, 4])
>>> 1&2&3&4

Where in the python documentation is * explained?

Asked By: Kifsif

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Answers:

The *args calling convention is documented in the Expressions reference:

If the syntax *expression appears in the function call, expression must evaluate to an iterable. Elements from this iterable are treated as if they were additional positional arguments; if there are positional arguments x1, …, xN, and expression evaluates to a sequence y1, …, yM, this is equivalent to a call with M+N positional arguments x1, …, xN, y1, …, yM.

So, since you used [1, 2, 3, 4] as the expression, which is an iterable, and there were no other positional arguments, it is treated as a call with M=0 and N=4, for a total of 4 positional arguments.

You can thus also call your function as f(1, 2, *[3, 4]) or any other combination of iterable and positional arguments, provided the iterable comes after the positionals.

Answered By: Martijn Pieters

Just an addition to very simply expand on the combination of unnamed and named arguments.

This is the general order you want to keep in mind:

def func(arg_1, ..., arg_N, *args, kwarg_1, ..., kwarg_M, **kwargs):
    # do stuff
    return True

Where, in most typical cases;

  • each single arg_i is an unnamed argument,
  • args is a list, hence a set of unnamed arguments,
  • each single kwarg_j is a named argument,
  • kwargs is a dictionary, hence a set of named arguments.
Answered By: s.k