Variables in Python - Real Python
Variables in Python - Real Python
Variables in Python
by John Sturtz 24 Comments basics python
Table of Contents
Variable Assignment
Variable Types in Python
Object References
Object Identity
Variable Names
Reserved Words (Keywords)
Conclusion
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Watch Now This tutorial has a related video course created by the Real Python team. Watch it together with the
written tutorial to deepen your understanding: Variables in Python
In the previous tutorial on Basic Data Types in Python, you saw how values of various Python data types can be
created. But so far, all the values shown have been literal or constant values:
Python >>>
>>> print(5.3)
5.3
If you’re writing more complex code, your program will need data that can change as program execution proceeds.
Here’s what you’ll learn in this tutorial: You will learn how every item of data in a Python program can be described
by the abstract term object, and you’ll learn how to manipulate objects using symbolic names called variables.
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Take the Quiz: Test your knowledge with our interactive “Python Variables” quiz. Upon completion you will
receive a score so you can track your learning progress over time:
Variable Assignment
Think of a variable as a name attached to a particular object. In Python, variables need not be declared or defined in
advance, as is the case in many other programming languages. To create a variable, you just assign it a value and then
start using it. Assignment is done with a single equals sign (=):
Python >>>
>>> n = 300
This is read or interpreted as “n is assigned the value 300.” Once this is done, n can be used in a statement or
expression, and its value will be substituted:
Python >>>
>>> print(n)
300
Just as a literal value can be displayed directly from the interpreter prompt in a REPL session without the need for
print(), so can a variable:
Python >>>
>>> n
300
Later, if you change the value of n and use it again, the new value will be substituted instead:
Python >>>
>>> n = 1000
>>> print(n)
1000
>>> n
1000
Python also allows chained assignment, which makes it possible to assign the same value to several variables
simultaneously:
Python >>>
>>> a = b = c = 300
>>> print(a, b, c)
300 300 300
The chained assignment above assigns 300 to the variables a, b, and c simultaneously.
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Variables in Python are not subject to this restriction. In Python, a variable may be assigned a value of one type and
then later re-assigned a value of a different type:
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Python >>>
Object References
What is actually happening when you make a variable assignment? This is an important question in Python, because
the answer differs somewhat from what you’d find in many other programming languages.
Python is a highly object-oriented language. In fact, virtually every item of data in a Python program is an object of a
specific type or class. (This point will be reiterated many times over the course of these tutorials.)
Python >>>
>>> print(300)
300
When presented with the statement print(300), the interpreter does the following:
You can see that an integer object is created using the built-in type() function:
Python >>>
>>> type(300)
<class 'int'>
A Python variable is a symbolic name that is a reference or pointer to an object. Once an object is assigned to a
variable, you can refer to the object by that name. But the data itself is still contained within the object.
For example:
Python >>>
>>> n = 300
This assignment creates an integer object with the value 300 and assigns the variable n to point to that object.
Variable Assignment
Python >>>
>>> print(n)
300
>>> type(n)
<class 'int'>
Python >>>
>>> m = n
What happens when it is executed? Python does not create another object. It simply creates a new symbolic name or
reference, m, which points to the same object that n points to.
Python >>>
>>> m = 400
Now Python creates a new integer object with the value 400, and m becomes a reference to it.
Python >>>
>>> n = "foo"
Now Python creates a string object with the value "foo" and makes n reference that.
Orphaned Object
There is no longer any reference to the integer object 300. It is orphaned, and there is no way to access it.
Tutorials in this series will occasionally refer to the lifetime of an object. An object’s life begins when it is created, at
which time at least one reference to it is created. During an object’s lifetime, additional references to it may be
created, as you saw above, and references to it may be deleted as well. An object stays alive, as it were, so long as
there is at least one reference to it.
When the number of references to an object drops to zero, it is no longer accessible. At that point, its lifetime is over.
Python will eventually notice that it is inaccessible and reclaim the allocated memory so it can be used for something
else. In computer lingo, this process is referred to as garbage collection.
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Object Identity
In Python, every object that is created is given a number that uniquely identifies it. It is guaranteed that no two
objects will have the same identifier during any period in which their lifetimes overlap. Once an object’s reference
count drops to zero and it is garbage collected, as happened to the 300 object above, then its identifying number
becomes available and may be used again.
The built-in Python function id() returns an object’s integer identifier. Using the id() function, you can verify that two
variables indeed point to the same object:
Python >>>
>>> n = 300
>>> m = n
>>> id(n)
60127840
>>> id(m)
60127840
>>> m = 400
>>> id(m)
60127872
After the assignment m = n, m and n both point to the same object, confirmed by the fact that id(m) and id(n) return
the same number. Once m is reassigned to 400, m and n point to different objects with different identities.
Python >>>
>>> m = 300
>>> n = 300
>>> id(m)
60062304
>>> id(n)
60062896
With the statement m = 300, Python creates an integer object with the value 300 and sets m as a reference to it. n
is then similarly assigned to an integer object with value 300—but not the same object. Thus, they have different
identities, which you can verify from the values returned by id().
Python >>>
>>> m = 30
>>> n = 30
>>> id(m)
1405569120
>>> id(n)
1405569120
Here, m and n are separately assigned to integer objects having value 30. But in this case, id(m) and id(n) are
identical!
For purposes of optimization, the interpreter creates objects for the integers in the range [-5, 256] at startup,
and then reuses them during program execution. Thus, when you assign separate variables to an integer value
in this range, they will actually reference the same object.
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Variable Names
The examples you have seen so far have used short, terse variable names like m and n. But variable names can be
more verbose. In fact, it is usually beneficial if they are because it makes the purpose of the variable more evident at
first glance.
Officially, variable names in Python can be any length and can consist of uppercase and lowercase letters (A-Z, a-z),
digits (0-9), and the underscore character (_). An additional restriction is that, although a variable name can contain
digits, the first character of a variable name cannot be a digit.
Note: One of the additions to Python 3 was full Unicode support, which allows for Unicode characters in a
variable name as well. You will learn about Unicode in greater depth in a future tutorial.
Python >>>
But this one is not, because a variable name can’t begin with a digit:
Python >>>
Note that case is significant. Lowercase and uppercase letters are not the same. Use of the underscore character is
significant as well. Each of the following defines a different variable:
Python >>>
>>> age = 1
>>> Age = 2
>>> aGe = 3
>>> AGE = 4
>>> a_g_e = 5
>>> _age = 6
>>> age_ = 7
>>> _AGE_ = 8
There is nothing stopping you from creating two different variables in the same program called age and Age, or for that
matter agE. But it is probably ill-advised. It would certainly be likely to confuse anyone trying to read your code, and
even you yourself, after you’d been away from it awhile.
It is worthwhile to give a variable a name that is descriptive enough to make clear what it is being used for. For
example, suppose you are tallying the number of people who have graduated college. You could conceivably choose
any of the following:
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Python >>>
All of them are probably better choices than n, or ncg, or the like. At least you can tell from the name what the value of
the variable is supposed to represent.
On the other hand, they aren’t all necessarily equally legible. As with many things, it is a matter of personal
preference, but most people would find the first two examples, where the letters are all shoved together, to be harder
to read, particularly the one in all capital letters. The most commonly used methods of constructing a multi-word
variable name are the last three examples:
Camel Case: Second and subsequent words are capitalized, to make word boundaries easier to see.
(Presumably, it struck someone at some point that the capital letters strewn throughout the variable name
vaguely resemble camel humps.)
Example: numberOfCollegeGraduates
Pascal Case: Identical to Camel Case, except the first word is also capitalized.
Example: NumberOfCollegeGraduates
Snake Case: Words are separated by underscores.
Example: number_of_college_graduates
Programmers debate hotly, with surprising fervor, which of these is preferable. Decent arguments can be made for all
of them. Use whichever of the three is most visually appealing to you. Pick one and use it consistently.
You will see later that variables aren’t the only things that can be given names. You can also name functions, classes,
modules, and so on. The rules that apply to variable names also apply to identifiers, the more general term for names
given to program objects.
The Style Guide for Python Code, also known as PEP 8, contains Naming Conventions that list suggested standards
for names of different object types. PEP 8 includes the following recommendations:
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Python
Keywords
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Python
Keywords
class from or
You can see this list any time by typing help("keywords") to the Python interpreter. Reserved words are case-sensitive
and must be used exactly as shown. They are all entirely lowercase, except for False, None, and True.
Trying to create a variable with the same name as any reserved word results in an error:
Python >>>
>>> for = 3
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
Conclusion
This tutorial covered the basics of Python variables, including object references and identity, and naming of Python
identifiers.
You now have a good understanding of some of Python’s data types and know how to create variables that reference
objects of those types.
Next, you will see how to combine data objects into expressions involving various operations.
Take the Quiz: Test your knowledge with our interactive “Python Variables” quiz. Upon completion you will
receive a score so you can track your learning progress over time:
Mark as Completed
Watch Now This tutorial has a related video course created by the Real Python team. Watch it together with the
written tutorial to deepen your understanding: Variables in Python
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Each tutorial at Real Python is created by a team of developers so that it meets our high quality standards. The team members who
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