diff --git a/Python-Function-ID.md b/Python-Function-ID.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..56accffb9 --- /dev/null +++ b/Python-Function-ID.md @@ -0,0 +1,42 @@ +# Python id(object) + +`id()` is a built-in function in Python 3, which returns the *identity* of an object. The *identity* is a unique integer for that object during its lifetime. This is also the address of the object in memory. + +## Argument + +#### object + +The `object` argument can typically be a `int`,`float`, `str`,`list`, `dict`, `tuple` etc. + +## Code Sample + +```python +a = 2 +print(id(a)) #=> 140454723286976 (Values returned by id() might be different for different users) + +b = 3 +print(id(b)) #=> 140454723287008 + +c = 2 +print(id(c)) #=> 140454723286976 (This is same as id(a) since they both contain the same value and hence have same memory address) + +print(id(a) == id(b)) #=> False (since a and b have different values stored in them) +print(id(a) == id(c)) #=> True (since a and c have same values stored in them) + +d = 1.1 +e = 1.1 +print(id(d) == id(e)) #=> True (since d and e have same values stored in them) + +str1 = 'hello' +str2 = 'hello' +print(id(str1) == id(str2)) #=> True (since str1 and str2 have same values stored in them) + +# For complex objects like lists, tuples, dictionaries etc. id() would give a unique integer even if the content of those containers is same. +tup1 = (1,1) +tup2 = (1,1) +print(id(tup1) == id(tup2)) #=> False +``` + +:rocket: [REPL It!](https://repl.it/CQw7/1) + +[Official Docs](https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#id)