Thomas Wouters <thomas@xs4all.net>:

Reference manual docs for augmented assignment.

This closes SourceForge patch #101418.
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Fred Drake 2000-09-12 20:32:18 +00:00
parent 7740a01096
commit 31f5550fbe
1 changed files with 39 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -9,6 +9,7 @@ by semicolons. The syntax for simple statements is:
simple_stmt: expression_stmt
| assert_stmt
| assignment_stmt
| augmented_assignment_stmt
| pass_stmt
| del_stmt
| print_stmt
@ -247,6 +248,44 @@ print x
\end{verbatim}
\subsection{Augmented Assignment statements \label{augassign}}
Augmented assignment is the combination, in a single statement, of a binary
operation and an assignment statement:
\indexii{augmented}{assignment}
\index{statement!assignment, augmented}
\begin{verbatim}
augmented_assignment_stmt: target augop expression_list
augop: "+=" | "-=" | "*=" | "/=" | "%=" | "**="
| ">>=" | "<<=" | "&=" | "^=" | "|="
target: identifier | "(" target_list ")" | "[" target_list "]"
| attributeref | subscription | slicing
\end{verbatim}
(See section \ref{primaries} for the syntax definitions for the last
three symbols.)
An augmented assignment evaluates the target (which, unlike with normal
assignment statements, cannot be a tuple) and the expression list, performs
the binary operation specific to the type of assignment on the two operands,
and assigns the result to the original target. The target is only evaluated
once.
An augmented assignment expression like \code{x += 1} can be rewritten as
\code{x = x + 1} to achieve a similar, but not exactly equal effect. In the
augmented version, \code{x} is only evaluated once. Also, when possible, the
actual operation is performed \emph{in-place}, meaning that rather than
creating a new object and assigning that to the target, the old object is
modified instead.
With the exception of assigning to tuples and multiple targets in a single
statement, the assignment done by augmented assignment statements is handled
the same way as normal assignments. Similarly, with the exception of the
possible \emph{in-place} behaviour, the binary operation performed by
augmented assignment is the same as the normal binary operations.
\section{The \keyword{pass} statement \label{pass}}
\stindex{pass}