How can I assign the value of a variable using eval in python?

Okay. So my question is simple: How can I assign the value of a variable using eval in Python? I tried eval('x = 1') but that won’t work. It returns a SyntaxError. Why won’t this work?

Answers:

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Method 1

Because x=1 is a statement, not an expression. Use exec to run statements.

>>> exec('x=1')
>>> x
1

By the way, there are many ways to avoid using exec/eval if all you need is a dynamic name to assign, e.g. you could use a dictionary, the setattr function, or the locals() dictionary:

>>> locals()['y'] = 1
>>> y
1

Update: Although the code above works in the REPL, it won’t work inside a function. See Modifying locals in Python for some alternatives if exec is out of question.

Method 2

You can’t, since variable assignment is a statement, not an expression, and eval can only eval expressions. Use exec instead.

Better yet, don’t use either and tell us what you’re really trying to do so that we can come up with a safe and sane solution.

Method 3

x = 0
def assignNewValueToX(v):
    global x
    x = v

eval('assignNewValueToX(1)')
print(x)

It works… cause python will actually run assignNewValueToX to be able to evaluate the expression. It can be developed further, but I am sure there is a better option for almost any needs one may have.

Method 4

You can actually put exec() command inside eval()

So your statement would look like eval("exec('x = 1')")

p.s. this is dangerous


All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0

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