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Home/ Questions/Q 7729709
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 1, 20262026-06-01T06:02:16+00:00 2026-06-01T06:02:16+00:00

Which one of these two method invocations is considered most pythonic? some_method(that_has, very_many, aurguments=None,

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Which one of these two method invocations is considered most pythonic?

some_method(that_has, very_many, aurguments=None, of_different=None, 
            kinds=u'', and_importance=None, spanning=u'multple lines'):

or

method_args = {
   u'first_arg' : that_has,
   u'second_arg' : very_many,
   u'arguments' : None,
   u'of_different' : None,
   u'kinds' : u'',
   u'and_importance' : None,
   u'spanning' : u'multiple lines'
}
some_method(**method_args)

Personally I prefer the second when the first spans more than 2 lines and the first way if it fits in one line, for two lines I am not quite certain.

Edit: The passed arguments might not be as short and static as in my example, more likely to be quite long names.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-01T06:02:17+00:00Added an answer on June 1, 2026 at 6:02 am

    If it’s just a static call like that, the above is more Pythonic. If you want (and some people actually do this) you can align it like this:

    some_method(
        that_has,
        very_many,
        arguments=None,
        of_different=None, 
        kinds=u'',
        and_importance=None,
        spanning=u'multple lines'
    )
    

    Also note that your second way doesn’t even work – it only passes keyword arguments (to arguments that might not even be keywords).

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