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28.8.5: Aliasing

  • Page ID
    103200
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    If a refers to an object and you assign b = a, then both variables refer to the same object:

    >>> a = [1, 2, 3]
    >>> b = a
    >>> b is a
    True

    The association of a variable with an object is called a reference. In this example, there are two references to the same object.

    An object with more than one reference has more than one name, so we say that the object is aliased.

    If the aliased object is mutable, changes made with one alias affect the other:

    >>> b[0] = 17
    >>> print(a)
    [17, 2, 3]

    Although this behavior can be useful, it is error-prone. In general, it is safer to avoid aliasing when you are working with mutable objects.

    For immutable objects like strings, aliasing is not as much of a problem. In this example:

    a = 'banana'
    b = 'banana'

    it almost never makes a difference whether a and b refer to the same string or not.


    This page titled 28.8.5: Aliasing is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Chuck Severance via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.