You cannot return two values, but you can return a tuple
or a list
and unpack it after the call:
def select_choice():
...
return i, card # or [i, card]
my_i, my_card = select_choice()
On line return i, card
i, card
means creating a tuple. You can also use parenthesis like return (i, card)
, but tuples are created by comma, so parens are not mandatory. But you can use parens to make your code more readable or to split the tuple over multiple lines. The same applies to line my_i, my_card = select_choice()
.
If you want to return more than two values, consider using a named tuple. It will allow the caller of the function to access fields of the returned value by name, which is more readable. You can still access items of the tuple by index. For example in Schema.loads
method Marshmallow framework returns a UnmarshalResult
which is a namedtuple
. So you can do:
data, errors = MySchema.loads(request.json())
if errors:
...
or
result = MySchema.loads(request.json())
if result.errors:
...
else:
# use `result.data`
In other cases you may return a dict
from your function:
def select_choice():
...
return {'i': i, 'card': card, 'other_field': other_field, ...}
But you might want consider to return an instance of a utility class (or a Pydantic/dataclass model instance), which wraps your data:
class ChoiceData():
def __init__(self, i, card, other_field, ...):
# you can put here some validation logic
self.i = i
self.card = card
self.other_field = other_field
...
def select_choice():
...
return ChoiceData(i, card, other_field, ...)
choice_data = select_choice()
print(choice_data.i, choice_data.card)