Positional-only arguments in Python
(Source/Credits: https://dev.to/deepsource/positional-only-arguments-in-python-108e)
The ability to specify positional-only arguments using the / marker in function definitions is among...
The ability to specify positional-only arguments using the /
marker in function definitions is among the many new improvements to the Python language coming in the upcoming 3.8 release. This addition to syntax has performance benefits and enables better API design. Let's look at the motivation behind positional-only arguments and how to use it, with examples.
Background
Keyword-only arguments have been available in Python with the *
marker, and addition of /
marker for positional-only arguments improves the language’s consistency. With positional-or-keyword parameters, the mix of calling conventions is not always desirable. Consider these examples:
- Some function parameters already have semantic meaning:
namedtuple(typenames, field_names, …)
- The parameter name has no true external meaning:
arg1
,arg2
, …, etc formin()
If the users start using a keyword argument, the library author cannot rename the parameter because it would be a breaking change. In case of min()
, the name of the parameter provides no intrinsic value and forces the author to maintain its name forever since callers might pass arguments as a keywords. This problem is solved by positional-only arguments. In addition, the parsing and handling of positional-only arguments is faster.
How to use positional-only arguments
To specify arguments as positional-only, a /
marker should be added after all those arguments in the function definition. Take this example:
python
def pow(x, y, /, mod=None):
r = x ** y
if mod is not None:
r %= mod
return r
The following would apply:
- All parameters to the left of
/
(in this case,x
andy
) can only be passed positionally. mod
can be passed positionally or with a keyword.
```python
pow(2, 10) # valid pow(2, 10, 17) # valid pow(2, 10, mod=17) # valid pow(x=2, y=10) # invalid, will raise a TypeError pow(2, y=10) # invalid, will raise a TypeError ```
Another example:
python
def table_format(items, separator=',', /, prettify=False):
pass
* Once a positional-only parameter is specified with a default, the following positional-only and positional-or-keyword parameters need to have defaults as well (in this case, prettify
).
* Positional-only parameters which do not have default values are required
positional-only parameters (in this case, items
).
The generic case
A function definition, with all flavors of argument-passing variants, would look like this:
python
def f(pos1, pos2, /, pos_or_kwd, *, kwd1, kwd2):
----------- ---------- ----------
| | |
| Positional or keyword |
| - Keyword only
-- Positional only
When to use positional-only arguments
- Use positional-only if names do not matter or have no meaning, and there are only a few arguments which will always be passed in the same order.
- Use keyword-only when names have meaning and the function definition is more understandable by being explicit with names.
Positional-only arguments were proposed in PEP 570, and it's worth taking a look at the doc to understand the feature in more detail.
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