what's wrong with "lambda x : print x/60,x%60"
Dan Bishop
danb_83 at yahoo.com
Tue Dec 6 01:30:36 EST 2005
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Tue Dec 6 01:30:36 EST 2005
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bonono at gmail.com wrote: > rurpy at yahoo.com wrote: > > bonono at gmail.com wrote: > > > rurpy at yahoo.com wrote: > > > > > and, as you just found out, a rather restrictive one > > > > > at that. > > > > > > > > In part because Python's designers failed to make "print" a function > > > > or provide an if-then-else expression. > > > > > > > Why would one need print in lambda ? I like ternary operator(and there > > > is ugly work around though still 100% functional). But print ? > > > > I dashed that last part off quickly, so I don't have a good reason. > > Maybe to insert a debugging print temporarily? > If one needs it for debugging, it raise an alarm bell if lambda is the > right thing to use. Though it is still doable, in a hackary way : > > def debug(x): print x > > reduce(lambda x,y: (x+y, debug(x))[0], range(10)) There's also lambda x, y: sys.stdout.write('%s\n' % x) or x + y
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