I create many object then I store in a list. But I want to delete them after some time because I create news one and don\'t want my memory goes high (in my case, it jumps to
tl;dr;
mylist.clear() # Added in Python 3.3
del mylist[:]
are probably the best ways to do this. The rest of this answer tries to explain why some of your other efforts didn't work.
cpython at least works on reference counting to determine when objects will be deleted. Here you have multiple references to the same objects. a refers to the same object that c[0] references. When you loop over c (for i in c:), at some point i also refers to that same object. the del keyword removes a single reference, so:
for i in c:
del i
creates a reference to an object in c and then deletes that reference -- but the object still has other references (one stored in c for example) so it will persist.
In the same way:
def kill(self):
del self
only deletes a reference to the object in that method. One way to remove all the references from a list is to use slice assignment:
mylist = list(range(10000))
mylist[:] = []
print(mylist)
Apparently you can also delete the slice to remove objects in place:
del mylist[:] #This will implicitly call the `__delslice__` or `__delitem__` method.
This will remove all the references from mylist and also remove the references from anything that refers to mylist. Compared that to simply deleting the list -- e.g.
mylist = list(range(10000))
b = mylist
del mylist
#here we didn't get all the references to the objects we created ...
print(b) #[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, ...]
Finally, more recent python revisions have added a clear method which does the same thing that del mylist[:] does.
mylist = [1, 2, 3]
mylist.clear()
print(mylist)