Does Python do slice-by-reference on strings?
开发者_JAVA百科I want to know if when I do something like
a = "This could be a very large string..."
b = a[:10]
a new string is created or a view/iterator is returned
Python does slice-by-copy, meaning every time you slice (except for very trivial slices, such as a[:]
), it copies all of the data into a new string object.
According to one of the developers, this choice was made because
The [slice-by-reference] approach is more complicated, harder to implement and may lead to unexpected behavior.
For example:
a = "a long string with 500,000 chars ..." b = a[0] del aWith the slice-as-copy design the string
a
is immediately freed. The slice-as-reference design would keep the 500kB string in memory although you are only interested in the first character.
Apparently, if you absolutely need a view into a string, you can use a memoryview
object.
When you slice strings, they return a new instance of String. Strings are immutable objects.
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