Get a list/tuple/dict of the arguments passed to a function?

Phillip B Oldham picture Phillip B Oldham · Mar 26, 2010 · Viewed 35k times · Source

Given the following function:

def foo(a, b, c):
    pass

How would one obtain a list/tuple/dict/etc of the arguments passed in, without having to build the structure myself?

Specifically, I'm looking for Python's version of JavaScript's arguments keyword or PHP's func_get_args() method.

What I'm not looking for is a solution using *args or **kwargs; I need to specify the argument names in the function definition (to ensure they're being passed in) but within the function I want to work with them in a list- or dict-style structure.

Answer

Pär Wieslander picture Pär Wieslander · Mar 26, 2010

You can use locals() to get a dict of the local variables in your function, like this:

def foo(a, b, c):
    print locals()

>>> foo(1, 2, 3)
{'a': 1, 'c': 3, 'b': 2}

This is a bit hackish, however, as locals() returns all variables in the local scope, not only the arguments passed to the function, so if you don't call it at the very top of the function the result might contain more information than you want:

def foo(a, b, c):
    x = 4
    y = 5
    print locals()

>>> foo(1, 2, 3)
{'y': 5, 'x': 4, 'c': 3, 'b': 2, 'a': 1}

I would rather construct a dict or list of the variables you need at the top of your function, as suggested in the other answers. It's more explicit and communicates the intent of your code in a more clear way, IMHO.