I need to simplify my code as much as possible: it needs to be one line of code. I need to put a for loop inside a lambda expression, something like that:
x = lambda x: (for i in x : print i)
I need to simplify my code as much as possible: it needs to be one line of code. I need to put a for loop inside a lambda expression, something like that:
x = lambda x: (for i in x : print i)
Just in case, if someone is looking for a similar problem...
Most solutions given here are one line and are quite readable and simple. Just wanted to add one more that does not need the use of lambda(I am assuming that you are trying to use lambda just for the sake of making it a one line code). Instead, you can use a simple list comprehension.
[print(i) for i in x]
BTW, the return values will be a list of None
s.
Since a for
loop is a statement (as is print
, in Python 2.x), you cannot include it in a lambda expression. Instead, you need to use the write
method on sys.stdout
along with the join
method.
x = lambda x: sys.stdout.write("\n".join(x) + "\n")
To add on to chepner's answer for Python 3.0 you can alternatively do:
x = lambda x: list(map(print, x))
Of course this is only if you have the means of using Python > 3 in the future... Looks a bit cleaner in my opinion, but it also has a weird return value, but you're probably discarding it anyway.
I'll just leave this here for reference.
anon and chepner's answers are on the right track. Python 3.x has a print function and this is what you will need if you want to embed print within a function (and, a fortiori, lambdas).
However, you can get the print function very easily in python 2.x by importing from the standard library's future module. Check it out:
>>>from __future__ import print_function
>>>
>>>iterable = ["a","b","c"]
>>>map(print, iterable)
a
b
c
[None, None, None]
>>>
I guess that looks kind of weird, so feel free to assign the return to _ if you would like to suppress [None, None, None]'s output (you are interested in the side-effects only, I assume):
>>>_ = map(print, iterable)
a
b
c
>>>
If you are like me just want to print a sequence within a lambda, without get the return value (list of None).
x = range(3)
from __future__ import print_function # if not python 3
pra = lambda seq=x: map(print,seq) and None # pra for 'print all'
pra()
pra('abc')
lambda is nothing but an anonymous function means no need to define a function like def name():
lambda <inputs>: <expression>
[print(x) for x in a] -- This is the for loop in one line
a = [1,2,3,4]
l = lambda : [print(x) for x in a]
l()
output
1
2
3
4
We can use lambda functions in for loop Follow below code
list1 = [1,2,3,4,5]
list2 = []
for i in list1:
f = lambda i: i /2
list2.append(f(i))
print(list2)
First of all, it is the worst practice to write a lambda function like x = some_lambda_function. Lambda functions are fundamentally meant to be executed inline. They are not meant to be stored. Thus when you write x = some_lambda_function is equivalent to
def some_lambda_funcion():
pass
Moving to the actual answer. You can map the lambda function to an iterable so something like the following snippet will serve the purpose.
a = map(lambda x : print(x),[1,2,3,4])
list(a)
If you want to use the print
function for the debugging purpose inside the reduce
cycle, then logical or
operator will help to escape the None
return value in the accumulator variable.
def test_lam():
'''printing in lambda within reduce'''
from functools import reduce
lam = lambda x, y: print(x,y) or x + y
print(reduce(lam,[1,2,3]))
if __name__ =='__main__':
test_lam()
Will print out the following:
1 2
3 3
6
You can make it one-liner.
Sample
myList = [1, 2, 3]
print_list = lambda list: [print(f'Item {x}') for x in list]
print_list(myList)
otherList = [11, 12, 13]
print_list(otherList)
Output
Item 1
Item 2
Item 3
Item 11
Item 12
Item 13