@AaronHall That brings to the question -- Is there a Visual Scripting Language like Scratch which can be considered Functional and suitable for young minds?
meh, the use-cases for lambda are few - regular function definitions give you the same result but allow complex code blocks, annotations, and know their own name.
reduce was moved from the builtins to the standard lib's functools because the only reason most people used it was to rewrite sum - which is a builtin function.
map (and filter) are subsumed in comprehensions, so they're kinda redundant too.
lol, I remember doing that. There was also a thing called zip() taught along with that.
Programming is boiling down to module/library calls these days, especially if you look at machine learning, data science, statistics and all that. Especially in graphics packages, you'll find the code implementation is always an import of a library and calling a bunch of subroutines in order.
I think the reason Python isn't taught to functional beginners is because the people excited to teach functional programming don't think of Python in a functional way.
I think Python is a rather good functional language for beginners because it allows code to be written in the functional paradigm, and because it's easy to read and understand (or so I think) it's easy to teach beginners about programming.
But it is primarily object oriented and focuses on correctness and the ability to change behavior at just about any point.