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What does the asterisk do in *a, b, c = line.split()?

Assume line is: "Chicago Sun 01:52" .

What does *a, b, c = line.split() do? In particular, what is the significance of the asterisk?

Edit: Upon testing it, it seems like "Chicago" , "Sun" and "01:52" are all stored in a , b and c . The asterisk seems to lead to "Chicago" being stored in a as the first element of a list. So, we have a = ["Chicago"] , b = "Sun" and c = "01:52" . Could anyone point to material on the functionality of the asterisk operator in this situation?

Splitting that text by whitespace will give you:

In [743]: line.split()
Out[743]: ['Chicago', 'Sun', '01:52']

Now, this is a 3 element list . The assignment will take the last two elements of the output and assign them to b and c respectively. The * , or the splat operator will then pass the remainder of that list to a , and so a is a list of elements. In this case, a is a single-element list.

In [744]: *a, b, c = line.split()

In [745]: a
Out[745]: ['Chicago']

In [746]: b
Out[746]: 'Sun'

In [747]: c
Out[747]: '01:52'

Look at PEP 3132 and Where are python's splat operators * and ** valid? for more information on the splat operators, how they work and where they're applicable.

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