SyntaxError: non-default argument follows default argument

Question:

from os import system
def a(len1,hgt=len1,til,col=0):
    system('mode con cols='+len1,'lines='+hgt)
    system('title',til)
    system('color',col)

a(64,25,"hi","0b")
input()

When I run this, it rejects “def a(…” and highlights “(” in red. I have no clue why.

Asked By: YoungCoder5

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Answers:

You can’t have a non-keyword argument after a keyword argument.

Make sure you re-arrange your function arguments like so:

def a(len1,til,hgt=len1,col=0):
    system('mode con cols='+len1,'lines='+hgt)
    system('title',til)
    system('color',col)

a(64,"hi",25,"0b")
Answered By: Martin Konecny

As the error message says, non-default argument til should not follow default argument hgt.

Changing order of parameters (function call also be adjusted accordingly) or making hgt non-default parameter will solve your problem.

def a(len1, hgt=len1, til, col=0):

->

def a(len1, hgt, til, col=0):

UPDATE

Another issue that is hidden by the SyntaxError.

os.system accepts only one string parameter.

def a(len1, hgt, til, col=0):
    system('mode con cols=%s lines=%s' % (len1, hgt))
    system('title %s' % til)
    system('color %s' % col)
Answered By: falsetru

Let me clarify two points here:

  • Firstly non-default argument should not follow the default argument, it means you can’t define (a='b', c) in function.
    The correct order of defining parameter in function are:

    • positional parameter or non-default parameter i.e (a, b, c)
    • keyword parameter or default parameter i.e (a='b', r='j')
    • keyword-only parameter i.e (*args)
    • var-keyword parameter i.e (**kwargs)
def example(a, b, c=None, r="w", d=[], *ae,  **ab):

(a,b) are positional parameter

(c=none) is optional parameter

(r="w") is keyword parameter

(d=[]) is list parameter

(*ae) is keyword-only

(*ab) is var-keyword parameter

so first re-arrange your parameters

  • now the second thing is you have to define len1 when you are doing hgt=len1
    the len1 argument is not defined when default values are saved, Python computes and saves default values when you define the function
    len1 is not defined, does not exist when this happens (it exists only when the function is executed)

so second remove this "len1 = hgt" it’s not allowed in python.

keep in mind the difference between argument and parameters.

Answered By: Aaditya Ura

Inside the function all the variables should be defined in the same format. While you have given default values to some variables.

def(len1, hgt=len1, til, col=0):

It should be like

def(len1, hgt, til, col):

or

def(len1=value, hgt=value, til=value, col=value):
Answered By: Kartikey Srivastava
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