1
0
mirror of https://github.com/jbranchaud/til synced 2026-03-04 06:58:45 +00:00
Files
til/python/access-most-recent-return-value-in-repl.md

1.1 KiB

Access Most Recent Return Value In REPL

One of my favorite features of Ruby's irb and pry are that you can use _ to reference the most recent return value. Often as we use an interpreter or REPL, we end up with intermediate values. That is, we've execute some kind of statement which returned a value and we now want to use that resulting value in our next statement. Python also supports _.

Let's say I've run a statement that took a while to process, but I forgot to assign it to a variable. Instead of re-running the whole thing, I can create a variable that references the previous return value using _.

>>> BytePairEncoding.train_bpe(long_text)
{'merge_rules': [...], 'vocab': {...}}
>>> result = _
>>> list(result.keys())
['merge_rules', 'vocab']

Even if I don't necessarily want to assign it a variable, it can be nice to reference the previous value as I continue with what I'm doing:

>>> result['merge_rules'][0][1]
256
>>> result['vocab'][_]
b'e '

Notice how the value from the first statement gets used as part of a dict access.

source