Python Global Scope Troubles
Solution 1:
There are several important things to note here.
First, global isn't global. The really global things, like built-in functions, are stored in the __builtin__ module, or builtins in Python 3. global means module-level.
Second, when you import *, you get new variables with the same names as the ones in the module you import *'d from, referring to the same objects. That means if you then reassign the variable in one module, the other doesn't see the change. On the other hand, mutating a mutable object is a change both modules see.
This means that after the first line of main.py:
fromFile2import *
File1, File2, and __main__ (the module the main script runs in) all have separate x variables referring to the same 5 object. File2 and __main__ also have updateX variables referring to the updateX function.
After the second line:
updateX()
Only File2's x variable is reassigned to 6. (The function has a record of where it was defined, so it updates File2's x instead of __main__'s.)
The third line:
print x
prints __main__'s x, which is still 5.
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