I was writing some lambda functions and couldn't figure this out. Is there a way to have something like lambda x: x if (x<3)
in python? As lambda a,b: a if (a > b) else b
works ok. So far lambda x: x < 3 and x or None
seems to be the closest i have found.
5 Answers
A lambda, like any function, must have a return value.
lambda x: x if (x<3)
does not work because it does not specify what to return if not x<3
. By default functions return None
, so you could do
lambda x: x if (x<3) else None
But perhaps what you are looking for is a list comprehension with an if
condition. For example:
In [21]: data = [1, 2, 5, 10, -1]
In [22]: [x for x in data if x < 3]
Out[22]: [1, 2, -1]
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@ ubuntu -- thank you. Not sure why I assumed it should return None without specifying it.– rootOct 3, 2012 at 13:09
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7That's a reasonable assumption since functions return None by default. The important thing to remember is that what follows
lambda x:
must be an expression, not a statement.– unutbuOct 3, 2012 at 13:13 -
4@root I sometimes find it handy to think of a
lambda
as though it's actually written asdef lambda(x, y): return ...
– Jon Clements ♦Oct 3, 2012 at 13:33
I found that filter
provided exactly what I was looking for in python 2:
>>> data = [1, 2, 5, 10, -1]
>>> filter(lambda x: x < 3, data)
[1, 2, -1]
The implementation is different in 2.x and 3.x: while 2.x provides a list, 3.x provides an iterator. Using a list comprehension might make for a cleaner use in 3.x:
>>> data = [1, 2, 5, 10, -1]
>>> [filter(lambda x: x < 3, data)]
[1, 2, -1]
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The implementation is not the same in both 2 and 3. In 2 it returns a list, in 3 it returns an iterator, and to get it into a list, you need to convert it:
list(filter(lambda, data))
. Either way, it's generally considered easier to read a comprehension with anif
clause like in unutbu's answer.– wjandreaNov 21, 2020 at 21:00 -
Added your input about python 3, thank you! I suppose the stylistic changes are a bit about personal preference. Lambdas feel a bit natural to me due to using functional programming languages. When I read them, something like
x: x < 3
comes across as less repetitive/more elegant than something likex for x in data if x [...]
. Jan 9, 2021 at 0:07 -
Welcome! But your Python3 implementation is incorrect. You get a filter object inside a list. You need to convert it:
list(filter(lambda, data))
or use a splat:[*filter(lambda x: x < 3, data)]
. It's also not a list comprehension.– wjandreaJan 9, 2021 at 2:14
What's wrong with lambda x: x if x < 3 else None
?
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my understanding is that list comprehension is more appropriate in this scenario– zinkingOct 3, 2012 at 14:33
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The question doesn't mention iteration, so I'm not sure what you mean. Can you elaborate? Oct 3, 2012 at 15:55
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@Mardini No, but the
lambda
will return None in that case. It has to return something. Dec 20, 2019 at 12:48 -
@user4815162342 This is exactly what I meant, lambda will return "None"– MardiniDec 21, 2019 at 13:39
You can always try to invoke 'filter' for conditional checks. Fundamentally, map()
has to work on every occurrence of the iterables, so it cannot pick and choose. But filter may help narrow down the choices. For example, I create a list from 1 to 19 but want to create a tuple of squares of only even numbers.
x = list(range(1,20))
y = tuple(map(lambda n: n**2, filter(lambda n: n%2==0,x)))
print (y)
You can use ellipsis ...
to fill else
statement
lambda x: x if (x<3) else ...
Note it does not work with pass
.