Practically speaking, to me there are two differences:
The first is about what they do and what they return:
def is a keyword that doesn't return anything and creates a 'name' in the local namespace.
lambda is a keyword that returns a function object and does not create a 'name' in the local namespace.
Hence, if you need to call a function that takes a function object, the only way to do that in one line of python code is with a lambda. There's no equivalent with def.
In some frameworks this is actually quite common; for example, I use Twisted a lot, and so doing something like
d.addCallback(lambda result: self._someVariable = resultsetattr(self, _someVariable, result))
is quite common, and more concise with lambdas.
The second difference is about what the actual function is allowed to do.
- A function defined with 'def' can contain any python code
- A function defined with 'lambda' has to evaluate to an expression, and can thus not contain statements like print, import, raise, ...
For example,
def p(x): print x
works as expected, while
lambda x: print x
is a SyntaxError.
Of course, there are workarounds - substitute print with sys.stdout.write, or import with __import__. But usually you're better off going with a function in that case.
