I have a python specific question. What does a single underscore _
as a parameter means?
I have a function calling hexdump(_)
. The _ was never defined, so I guess it has some special value, I could not find a reference telling me what it means on the net. I would be happy if you could tell me.
问题:
回答1:
In Python shells, the underscore (_
) means the result of the last evaluated expression in the shell:
>>> 2+3
5
>>> _
5
There's also _2
, _3
and so on in IPython but not in the original Python interpreter. It has no special meaning in Python source code as far as I know, so I guess it is defined somewhere in your code if it runs without errors.
回答2:
It doesn't have a special value in the code you write. It stores the result of the last expression you evaluated in your interactive interpreter and is used for convenience
回答3:
From what I've been able to figure out, it seems like this is the case:
_
is used to indicate that the input variable is a throwaway variable/parameter and thus might be required or expected, but will not be used in the code following it.
For example:
# Ignore a value of specific location/index
for _ in rang(10)
print "Test"
# Ignore a value when unpacking
a,b,_,_ = my_method(var1)
(Credit to this post)
The specific example I came across was this:
def f(_):
x = random() * 2 - 1
y = random() * 2 - 1
return 1 if x ** 2 + y ** 2 < 1 else 0
回答4:
underscore is considered a 'don't care' variable, furthermore IDEs like PyCharm will not give a warning for it if it is unused
so in a function
def q(a, b, _, c):
pass
the IDE will underline a,b and c (unused parameter) but not the underscore
why would you use it and not omit the parameter?
->when you inherit from some class and want to override a function where you don't want to use some parameter
other common use is to indicate you don't want to use a part of a tuple when you iterate (or other unpacking) - this reduces clutter
names_and_food = [('michael', 'fruit'), ('eva', 'vegetables')]
for name, _ in names_and_food:
print(name)
I cant find it in any python PEP, but pylint has it even in the FAQ
回答5:
Yes it does have a meaning in your code, as this example shows:
>>> def f(x):
return (x, x + 2)
>>> (i, j) = f(5)
>>> i
5
>>> j
7
>>> (k, _) = f(7)
>>> k
7
As you can see, this allows you not to give a name to a returned value. But your case is different as the '_' is used as a parameter (the standard python shell expects it as a variable: NameError: name '_' is not defined
).