Book Image

Functional Python Programming

By : Steven F. Lott, Steven F. Lott
Book Image

Functional Python Programming

By: Steven F. Lott, Steven F. Lott

Overview of this book

Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Functional Python Programming
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Summary


In this chapter, we've identified a number of features that characterize the functional programming paradigm. We started with first-class and higher-order functions. The idea is that a function can be an argument to a function or the result of a function. When functions become the object of additional programming, we can write some extremely flexible and generic algorithms.

The idea of immutable data is sometimes odd in an imperative and object-oriented programming language such as Python. When we start to focus on functional programming, however, we see a number of ways that state changes can be confusing or unhelpful. Using immutable objects can be a helpful simplification.

Python focuses on strict evaluation: all sub-expressions are evaluated from left-to-right through the statement. Python, however, does perform some non-strict evaluation. The or, and, and if-else logical operators are non-strict: all subexpressions are not necessarily evaluated. Similarly, a generator function...