I\'d like to point to a function that does nothing:
def identity(*args)
return args
my use case is something like this
An identity function, as defined in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identity_function, takes a single argument and returns it unchanged:
def identity(x):
return x
What you are asking for when you say you want the signature def identity(*args) is not strictly an identity function, as you want it to take multiple arguments. That's fine, but then you hit a problem as Python functions don't return multiple results, so you have to find a way of cramming all of those arguments into one return value.
The usual way of returning "multiple values" in Python is to return a tuple of the values - technically that's one return value but it can be used in most contexts as if it were multiple values. But doing that here means you get
>>> def mv_identity(*args):
... return args
...
>>> mv_identity(1,2,3)
(1, 2, 3)
>>> # So far, so good. But what happens now with single arguments?
>>> mv_identity(1)
(1,)
And fixing that problem quickly gives other issues, as the various answers here have shown.
So, in summary, there's no identity function defined in Python because:
For your precise case,
def dummy_gettext(message):
return message
is almost certainly what you want - a function that has the same calling convention and return as gettext.gettext, which returns its argument unchanged, and is clearly named to describe what it does and where it's intended to be used. I'd be pretty shocked if performance were a crucial consideration here.