Understanding Lambda Functions
Solution 1:
First you should understand that everything in Python is an object. And functions do come in everything.
From your function f1()
, you are actually returning a reference to a lambda
function. Which you can assign in any variable.
For e.g.:
>>> f = lambda x: x # Assign reference to lambda function to f.
# Now you can call lambda function using `f`
>>> f(1)
1
Now, let's move ahead with your example. Your first statement is inside if
is:
f = f1(100)
This assignment is equivalent to:
f = lambda x: x + 100 # Replace `n` with `100` in return statment in `f1`.
So, the next two call is pretty straighforward:
print f(1) # returns `1 + 100` = 101 (Replace `x` with `1`.
print f(3) # returns `3 + 100` = 103
So, now you get the relation between x
and n
. 'x' is replaced by the argument to f
and 'n' is replaced by argument to f1
.
Please explain print f1(10)
f1()
returns a reference to a lambda function. And that is what it will print. The output is similar to the one which you get in the below snippet:
>>> def func():
return 5
>>> func
<function func at 0x021F0F30>
Except that func
is replaced with lambda
, since f1 returns a lambda function only.
I thought f(5) will 15 ( 10 + 5)
You would have got that output, had you re-assigned the return value of f1
to f
in the previous statement. But, since you have just printed the value of f(10)
, f
is still binded to - lambda x: x + 100
. So you get 105
.
And then you print the type of f1
, which is a function only:
print type(f1)
Solution 2:
A lambda
is pretty much another function. To use it, you have to call it too.
You return the actual lambda to f
, not the whole function f1
. Along with this, the lambda isn't called when you return it. That is why when you call f(1)
and f(3)
, it doesn't actually run f1
, but only the lambda.
Remember how I said lambdas are like functions? Well x
is an argument, while n
is the local variable n
that you defined in f1
.
f(5) != 15
because you did not actually use f1(10)
anywhere. You only printed it. if you did f = f(10)
, then it would be 15
.
print f1(10)
prints the lambda function (because that is what is being returned). It doesn't call it, just prints it.
Solution 3:
A lambda is just a way of writing a function on one line.
Initially you may not see the point in them, but they can be useful for generating lots of slightly different functions, or for specifying functions you may only use once, or all other various instances.
To try and understand a little better, imagine the following code - slightly different from your own:
def f2(n):
def g2(x):
return x + n
return g2
This does very much what your own code does, but by defining a function within the first function and then returning it. This essentially does the same thing as your code.
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