We need a Python canonical for the following category of questions, but the titles are pretty non-obvious and search-resistant, so we also need more dupe targets to be identified (or written). What should our canonicals and dupes be?
Current canonicals:
- Unnamed Python objects have the same id()
- How can two Python objects have same id() but 'is' operator returns False?
- python bound and unbound method object
- one frequently-used canonical. Non-obvious wording. Body references
id()
. Does not referenceis
operator.
- one frequently-used canonical. Non-obvious wording. Body references
Some of the many other questions:
- Why do methods of different objects of same class have same id? - not yet closed as duplicate
- Weird id() behaviour; different ids, yet id(x) == id(y) returns True? [duplicate of 3.]
- is operator not working on objects with same identity? [duplicate of 1,3]
- ... many others ...
Principles:
- two different objects can have the same
id()
if their lifetimes do not overlap; first one then the second happen to be temporarily created at the sameid()
address. This causes lots of grief:- one common example is Python method objects (which are temporary objects constructed to allow calling a method on a specific instance. Internally, Python uses a descriptor protocol to wrap the function in a method object each time). So
id(obj.meth)
is always the id of a temporary object. - a second example is any temporary expressions created but not assigned
- hence a common mistake pattern is to take
id1 = id(temp1); id2 = id(temp2)
then check ifid1 == id2
and wrongly conclude thattemp1
must be the same astemp2
- one common example is Python method objects (which are temporary objects constructed to allow calling a method on a specific instance. Internally, Python uses a descriptor protocol to wrap the function in a method object each time). So
is
is more reliable (and pessimistic) in evaluatingx is y
, both objects are alive at the same time, sois
returns False unless they really are the same object