Meaning of using commas and underscores with Python assignment operator?

matt b picture matt b · Nov 10, 2009 · Viewed 41.6k times · Source

Reading through Peter Norvig's Solving Every Sudoku Puzzle essay, I've encountered a few Python idioms that I've never seen before.

I'm aware that a function can return a tuple/list of values, in which case you can assign multiple variables to the results, such as

def f():
    return 1,2

a, b = f()

But what is the meaning of each of the following?

d2, = values[s]  ## values[s] is a string and at this point len(values[s]) is 1

If len(values[s]) == 1, then how is this statement different than d2 = values[s]?

Another question about using an underscore in the assignment here:

_,s = min((len(values[s]), s) for s in squares if len(values[s]) > 1)

Does the underscore have the effect of basically discarding the first value returned in the list?

Answer

eduffy picture eduffy · Nov 10, 2009

d2, = values[s] is just like a,b=f(), except for unpacking 1 element tuples.

>>> T=(1,)
>>> a=T
>>> a
(1,)
>>> b,=T
>>> b
1
>>> 

a is tuple, b is an integer.