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first filter() argument as list comprehension?
Hello alltogether Can someone please shed some light on my thoughts please. Can the Lambda func in the following codesnippet substituted with a list comprehension in some way? As I understand it, the filter() func needs a func as first argument and a list comprehension would be a list object and not a func object. I am wondering now if there is some elegant way to substitude the Lambda func with a list compr. anyway. nums = [11, 22, 33, 44, 55] res = list(filter(lambda x: x%2==0, nums)) print(res)
5 Réponses
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res = [ x for x in nums if x%2==0 ]
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The filter() function itself is said to be "unpythonic" because a list comprehension does exactly the same in a more obvious way. So you could argue that using the filter function isn't elegant, much less using a list comprehension as an argument for the filter function. Why would you want to do that? 🤔
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Allow me to clarify some issues with filter and list comprehension
1. Explicit function
The first argument does not have to be lambda function <-- CORRECT
It can be an explicit function.
https://code.sololearn.com/c4zQI01yPm9W/?ref=app
https://code.sololearn.com/c06bVu0UOOS2/?ref=app
https://code.sololearn.com/cETCb20aM5P1/?ref=app
2. List comprehension can accept tuple. But if you make output tuple it'll be a generator
https://code.sololearn.com/cIXh30zKfHrL/?ref=app
3. When the logic is simple condition, list comprehension is same as filter.
https://code.sololearn.com/cg7Ncf22uO5V/?ref=app
4. But actually list comprehension is more flexible
https://code.sololearn.com/c8lDV6FtY2ZD/?ref=app
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nice & short
Thx for your answer Gordon
Do you can think of any way of putting a list compr. as the first argument of the func filter() and just substitute the Lambda func?
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Hi Anna
Makes sense what you say. Thx for your input.
Me toying around with list comprehensions and collecting different samples. I still need some time to get comfortable with them.