--- layout: "language" page_title: "Local Values - 0.11 Configuration Language" sidebar_current: "docs-conf-old-locals" description: |- Local values assign a name to an expression that can then be used multiple times within a module. --- # Local Values -> **Note:** This page is about Terraform 0.11 and earlier. For Terraform 0.12 and later, see [Configuration Language: Configuring Local Values](../configuration/locals.html). Local values assign a name to an expression, that can then be used multiple times within a module. Comparing modules to functions in a traditional programming language, if [variables](./variables.html) are analogous to function arguments and [outputs](./outputs.html) are analogous to function return values then _local values_ are comparable to a function's local variables. This page assumes you're already familiar with [the configuration syntax](./syntax.html). ## Examples Local values are defined in `locals` blocks: ```hcl # Ids for multiple sets of EC2 instances, merged together locals { instance_ids = "${concat(aws_instance.blue.*.id, aws_instance.green.*.id)}" } # A computed default name prefix locals { default_name_prefix = "${var.project_name}-web" name_prefix = "${var.name_prefix != "" ? var.name_prefix : local.default_name_prefix}" } # Local values can be interpolated elsewhere using the "local." prefix. resource "aws_s3_bucket" "files" { bucket = "${local.name_prefix}-files" # ... } ``` Named local maps can be merged with local maps to implement common or default values: ```hcl # Define the common tags for all resources locals { common_tags = { Component = "awesome-app" Environment = "production" } } # Create a resource that blends the common tags with instance-specific tags. resource "aws_instance" "server" { ami = "ami-123456" instance_type = "t2.micro" tags = "${merge( local.common_tags, map( "Name", "awesome-app-server", "Role", "server" ) )}" } ``` ## Description The `locals` block defines one or more local variables within a module. Each `locals` block can have as many locals as needed, and there can be any number of `locals` blocks within a module. The names given for the items in the `locals` block must be unique throughout a module. The given value can be any expression that is valid within the current module. The expression of a local value can refer to other locals, but as usual reference cycles are not allowed. That is, a local cannot refer to itself or to a variable that refers (directly or indirectly) back to it. It's recommended to group together logically-related local values into a single block, particularly if they depend on each other. This will help the reader understand the relationships between variables. Conversely, prefer to define _unrelated_ local values in _separate_ blocks, and consider annotating each block with a comment describing any context common to all of the enclosed locals.