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Home/ Questions/Q 543289
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T10:32:09+00:00 2026-05-13T10:32:09+00:00

class a(object): data={‘a’:’aaa’,’b’:’bbb’,’c’:’ccc’} def pop(self, key, *args): return self.data.pop(key, *args)#what is this mean. b=a()

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class a(object):
    data={'a':'aaa','b':'bbb','c':'ccc'}
    def pop(self, key, *args):
            return self.data.pop(key, *args)#what is this mean.

b=a()
print b.pop('a',{'b':'bbb'})
print b.data

self.data.pop(key, *args) ←—— why is there a second argument?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T10:32:09+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 10:32 am

    The pop method of dicts (like self.data, i.e. {'a':'aaa','b':'bbb','c':'ccc'}, here) takes two arguments — see the docs

    The second argument, default, is what pop returns if the first argument, key, is absent.
    (If you call pop with just one argument, key, it raises an exception if that key’s absent).

    In your example, print b.pop('a',{'b':'bbb'}), this is irrelevant because 'a' is a key in b.data. But if you repeat that line…:

    b=a()
    print b.pop('a',{'b':'bbb'})
    print b.pop('a',{'b':'bbb'})
    print b.data
    

    you’ll see it makes a difference: the first pop removes the 'a' key, so in the second pop the default argument is actually returned (since 'a' is now absent from b.data).

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