When is del useful in Python?

One place I've found del useful is cleaning up extraneous variables in for loops:

for x in some_list:
  do(x)
del x

Now you can be sure that x will be undefined if you use it outside the for loop.


Firstly, you can del other things besides local variables

del list_item[4]
del dictionary["alpha"]

Both of which should be clearly useful. Secondly, using del on a local variable makes the intent clearer. Compare:

del foo

to

foo = None

I know in the case of del foo that the intent is to remove the variable from scope. It's not clear that foo = None is doing that. If somebody just assigned foo = None I might think it was dead code. But I instantly know what somebody who codes del foo was trying to do.


There's this part of what del does (from the Python Language Reference):

Deletion of a name removes the binding of that name from the local or global namespace

Assigning None to a name does not remove the binding of the name from the namespace.

(I suppose there could be some debate about whether removing a name binding is actually useful, but that's another question.)


Deleting a variable is different than setting it to None

Deleting variable names with del is probably something used rarely, but it is something that could not trivially be achieved without a keyword. If you can create a variable name by writing a=1, it is nice that you can theoretically undo this by deleting a.

It can make debugging easier in some cases as trying to access a deleted variable will raise an NameError.

You can delete class instance attributes

Python lets you write something like:

class A(object):
    def set_a(self, a):
        self.a=a
a=A()
a.set_a(3)
if hasattr(a, "a"):
    print("Hallo")

If you choose to dynamically add attributes to a class instance, you certainly want to be able to undo it by writing

del a.a