Scope in Python

Every object in Python functions within a scope. A scope is a block of code where an object in Python remains relevant. Namespaces uniquely identify all the objects inside a program. However, these namespaces also have a scope defined for them where you could use their objects without any prefix. A few examples of scope created during code execution in Python are as follows:

A local scope refers to the local objects available in the current function.A global scope refers to the objects available throughout the code execution since their inception.A module-level scope refers to the global objects of the current module accessible in the program.An outermost scope refers to all the built-in names callable in the program. The objects in this scope are searched last to find the name referenced.
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