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Home/ Questions/Q 9181009
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 17, 20262026-06-17T18:11:12+00:00 2026-06-17T18:11:12+00:00

For example: def update_condition(self, type, params): for condition in self.conditions: condition_loaded = json.loads(condition) if

  • 0

For example:

def update_condition(self, type, params):
    for condition in self.conditions:
        condition_loaded = json.loads(condition)
        if condition_loaded['type'] == type:
            condition_loaded['params'] = params
            condition = json.dumps(condition_loaded)

The above code does nothing because condition isn’t by reference. What’s the proper way to do this?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-17T18:11:14+00:00Added an answer on June 17, 2026 at 6:11 pm

    You could use enumerate:

    def update_condition(self, type, params):
        for i,condition in enumerate(self.conditions):
            condition_loaded = json.loads(condition)
            if condition_loaded['type'] == type:
                condition_loaded['params'] = params
                self.conditions[i] = json.dumps(condition_loaded)
    

    But, in general, these things are a little cleaner with helper functions and list comprehensions:

    def helper(condition,type,params)
        loaded = json.loads(condition)
        if loaded['type'] == type:
           loaded['params'] = params
           return json.dumps(loaded)
        return condition
    
    ...
    
    def update_condition(self, type, params):
        self.conditions = [helper(c,type,params) for c in self.conditions]
    

    It should be noted that this second solution doesn’t update the list in place — In other words, if you have other references to this list, they won’t be influenced. If you want, you can make the substitution in place pretty easily using slice assignment:

    def update_condition(self, type, params):
        self.conditions[:] = [helper(c,type,params) for c in self.conditions]
    
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