They are different, because the value of i in both the generator expression and the list comp are evaluated lazily, i.e. when the anonymous functions are invoked in f.
By that time, i is bound to the last value if t, which is -1.
So basically, this is what the list comprehension does (likewise for the genexp):
x = []
i = 1 # 1. from t
x.append(lambda: i)
i = -1 # 2. from t
x.append(lambda: i)
Now the lambdas carry around a closure that references i, but i is bound to -1 in both cases, because that is the last value it was assigned to.
If you want to make sure that the lambda receives the current value if of i, do
f(*[lambda u=i: u for i in t])
This way, you force the evaluation of i at the time the closure is created.
Edit: There is one difference between generator expressions and list comprehensions: the latter leak the loop variable into the surrounding scope.
