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Home/ Questions/Q 7058599
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 28, 20262026-05-28T04:07:55+00:00 2026-05-28T04:07:55+00:00

Possible Duplicate: “Least Astonishment” in Python: The Mutable Default Argument Edit: This has nothing

  • 0

Possible Duplicate:
“Least Astonishment” in Python: The Mutable Default Argument

Edit: This has nothing to do with recusion and is merely the mutable default argument feature: "Least Astonishment" and the Mutable Default Argument

Many thanks

I’m using python 2.7.2 on a win7 64bit machine and have a recursive function that acts on an lxml element, the function looks like this:

def recursive_search(start, stack = []):
    for element in start.getchildren():
        if condition1(element):
            stack = recursive_search(element, stack)
        elif condition2(element)
            stack.append(element)
        else:
            pass
    return stack

When I call the function for the first time with:

output = recursive_search(starting_element)

It works fine and I get what I expect but if I call it again with precisely the same command I get twice what I expect, as if i’ve called:

output += recursive_search(starting_element)

or as if the stack were a global variable. If I call it a third time I get 3 times the output etc. etc.

If I call:

output = recursive_search(starting_element, [])

Then I can call this as many times as I like and I don’t get the anomalous behavour.

Likewise if I modify the function such that it reads:

def recursive_search(start, stack = []):
    if stack == []:
        stack = []
    for element in start.getchildren():
        if condition1(element):
            stack = recursive_search(element, stack)
        elif condition2(element)
            stack.append(element)
        else:
            pass
    return stack

then I can call:

output = recursive_search(starting_point)

as many times as I like and again not get the anomalous behaviour.

My question is: what is going on – is this a bug or is there a rule I dont know about when passing empty strings into recursive functions in python?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-28T04:07:55+00:00Added an answer on May 28, 2026 at 4:07 am

    When you use a mutable value for a default argument, you only get a single instance of that default. If your function modifies it, that’s what will get passed on the next invocation of the function.

    There’s at least one reference to this in the Python documentation itself: http://docs.python.org/release/2.5.2/ref/function.html. See the section “Default parameter values are evaluated when the function definition is executed”.

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