Python Lists – copy() Function: Important Notes

When working with lists in Python, understanding how copying works is essential—especially if your list contains nested structures. Below are the key concepts, explained in a simple and practical way.

1. Shallow Copy vs. Deep Copy

Copying a list isn’t always as straightforward as it seems. Python gives you two different approaches depending on how independent you want the copied list to be.

Shallow Copy (Using copy() Method)

A shallow copy creates a new outer list, but inner elements are still shared by reference.
This means:

  • Changing a nested item affects both lists.
  • Only the top-level structure is duplicated.

Deep Copy (Using copy.deepcopy() Function)

A deep copy goes further by recursively duplicating all nested objects.
This ensures that every level of the copied list behaves independently.

Example:


import copy

deep_list = copy.deepcopy(nested)

#Output
 

Deep copying is especially useful when you’re working with multi-dimensional data, nested dictionaries, or complex list structures.

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