It's because this:
(a)
Is just a value surrounded by parenthesis. It's not a new tuple object. So your expression:
>>> '%d %d' % (*a)
will get translated to:
>>> '%d %d' % * a
which is obviously wrong in terms of python syntax.
In order to create a new tuple, with one expression as an initializer, you need to add a ',
' after it:
>>> '%d %d' % (*a,)
Note: unless a
is a generator, in this particular situation you could just type:
>>> '%d %d' % a
Also, if I may suggest something: you could start using new-style formating expressions. They are great!
>>> "{} {}".format(*a)
You can read more about them in those two paragraphs of python documentation, also there is this great website. The line above uses argument unpacking mechanism described below.
Update: since python 3.6, you could also use string interpolation - f-strings! These are described in PEP-498, and some examples can be found in Python documentation.
Starred Expressions
There are many more uses to starred expression than just creating a new list/tuple/dictionary. Most of them are described in this PEP, and this one
All of them come down to two kinds:
R-value unpacking:
>>> a, *b, c = range(5)
# a = 0
# b = [1, 2, 3]
# c = 4
>>> 10, *range(2)
(10, 0, 1)
Iterable / dictionary object initialization (notice that you can unpack dictionaries inside lists too!):
>>> [1, 2, *[3, 4], *[5], *(6, 7)]
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]
>>> (1, *[2, 3], *{"a": 1})
(1, 2, 3, 'a')
>>> {"a": 1, **{"b": 2, "c": 3}, **{"c": "new 3", "d": 4}}
{'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 'new 3', 'd': 4}
Of course, the most often seen use is arguments unpacking:
positional_arguments = [12, "a string", (1, 2, 3), other_object]
keyword_arguments = {"hostname": "localhost", "port": 8080}
send(*positional_arguments, **keyword_arguments)
which would translate to this:
send(12, "a string", (1, 2, 3), other_object, hostname="localhost", port=8080)
This topic has already been covered to a substantial extent in another Stack Overflow question.