You cannot pass a variable as a string*, and you should not do so.
If you want to pass a value between functions, the normal way is to pass it in as a parameter, and out as a return value.
If that is inconvenient, the usual solution is an object: define a class which carries both the shared variable, and methods which act on the variable.
If you need to create command objects, it is much better to do so in a structured way. For example, if you want to pass a function, and parameters, you can literally just pass the function object and the parameters in a tuple:
def foo():
return (functionONE,somearray,1,3)
command = foo()
command[0](*command[1:])
If you want to embed such commands within commands, you'll likely want to wrap that up with a class, so you can recursively evaluate the parameters. In fact, here's a little evaluator:
def evaluator(object):
def __init__(self,func=None,params=None):
self.func = func
self.params = params
def eval(self,alternativeparams=None):
if alternativeparams is not None:
params = alternativeparams
else:
params = self.params
if params is not None:
evaluatedparams = (item() if callable(item) else item for item in params)
else: evaluatedparams = None
if func is not None:
return self.func(*(evaluatedparams or ()))
else: return evaluatedparams
def __call__(self, *params):
return self.eval(params if params else None)
Although there are hacks by which you can pass references to local variables out of a function, these are not a great idea, because you end up creating your own half-baked object system which is more difficult to understand.
*
This is because a variable has a name (which is a string) and a context, which maps names to strings. So, you need, at least to pass a tuple to truly pass a variable.