In short, the lambda expression mentioned in programming is usually used in situations where a function is required but does not bother to name a function , that is, the anonymous function
When we pass in a function, there are times when we don't need to explicitly define a function, and it's easier to pass in an anonymous function directly.
In Python, there is a limited amount of support for anonymous functions. As an example of a map()
function, when calculating f (x) =x2, in addition to defining a f(x)
function, you can also pass in an anonymous function directly:
>>> list (map (lambda x:x * x, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9])) [1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64, 81]
By contrast, the anonymous function lambda x: x * x
is actually:
def f (x): return x * x
The keyword lambda
represents an anonymous function, preceded by a colon, that x
represents a function parameter.
The anonymous function has a restriction that there can be only one expression, without writing return
, and the return value is the result of that expression.
There is a benefit to using anonymous functions because the function does not have a name and does not have to worry about function name collisions. In addition, the anonymous function is also a function object, you can assign the anonymous function to a variable, and then use the variable to invoke the function:
Lambda x:x * x>>> F<function <lambda> at 0x101c6ef28>> >> F (5)25
Similarly, anonymous functions can be returned as return values, such as:
def build (x, y): return Lambda: x * x + y * y
Python has more lambda limitations than many other languages, and the worst is that it can only consist of one expression. This limitation is mainly to prevent abuse, because when people find that lambda is very convenient, it is easier to abuse, but more can make the program look less clear, after all, everyone's understanding of the level of abstraction is different.
Python anonymous function (lambda)