@Zero: I use "The Pythonicness that needs hours of thought is not the true Pythonicness" sometimes when people are working hard to make their perfectly functional code more Pythonic instead of doing something useful.
I read it the same way as well and looked it up and got to see his wife's art work and learned about his brother and child... so yeah, I don't know where I was going with this
Also, I have finally started to like the standard documentation, i usually resorted to some blog or an alternate source to look up python stuff just because the standard doc looked cluttered.
@CoryMadden if all solutions are wrong for your problem in the exact same way, then your problem is probably not what you think it is. Time to put together an MCVE and see where your issue lies
Completely unrelated to any of this, but I was astonished by this last night and I want to share: "just desserts" is actually supposed to be "just deserts".
Apparently my interpretation of the phrase as "exactly the after-dinner treats you have earned through your own merit, and no more" is not exactly the intended meaning
I speak a few languages. It's not so much that I prefer a language. It's that english has inherited/appropriated/whateveriated words and the grammar gets really wild.
Perhaps German leaves spaces out of some phrases for the same reason that English doesn't start interrogative sentences with an upside down question mark. Which is to say, for natives it doesn't hinder understanding, and if you beg to differ then that's a cultural difference rather than objective truth
@DavidCullen And German has a lot of specific words that cannot be translated into English because English uses the same term for very different things all the time. English is so unbelievable unspecific sometimes..
@marsouf: use timeit to find out! then ask yourself "So by choosing the faster one, I've saved myself 0.3 microseconds each call. It took me fifteen minutes to figure this out. So how many times do I need to call this before I've actually saved any time and not just wasted it?"
@rogcg My limited understanding is: variables referenced inside that expression will still be resolvable, even if the lambda is accessed from a context where those variables would ordinarily be inaccessible or nonexistent
Once we finish calling f and return to the global scope, one might naively expect that a has been collected and can no longer be interacted with. But calling the return value of f shows that a still exists
@marsouf tl;dr: Use map when you already have a function f you want to use anyway. Use generator expressions in every other case since they are usually more readable then. Ignore all timing results because those points don’t matter.
@Andras: If you attempt to do Python purely functional, you have already lost anyway. I don’t actually get why one would write a book about it. Half of that is likely lying anyway.
@PM2Ring I feel as though I've seen problems before where text is not a valid named argument for some widgets, but I don't think the problem exhibited itself in this way. Quite interesting.
All this said, I do tend to write code in which as many functions are pure as possible and the effects are restricted to interface layers. Makes testing much easier (less to patch).
[].append(23) doesn't use assignments and isn't functional. Therefore, not using assignments is not sufficient to be completely functional in all cases
@idjaw As I understand it, adhering to functional principles will allow you to be certain of certain desirable properties of your program. For example, "calling this function twice will do the same thing as calling it once" can be quite valuable in certain contexts.
Functional programming is not universally better than other kinds of programming. You probably wouldn't want to write a purely functional game engine, for instance.
If your program has a lot of mutable state, then changing everything to be functional will probably mean that you're going to do wacky workarounds like pass a monolithic state frozendict in and out of 100% of your functions, and create expensive copies of it with slight modifications instead of just mutating it
@marsouf Maybe you shouldn’t read a book about “functional programming” in Python, as that apparently gives you the wrong idea about actual functional programming
@poke Indeed, functional game engines exist, but my perspective is that they are often proofs-of-concept that nobody seriously uses. I acknowledge that this is not an easily disprovable viewpoint, since I can just No True Scotsman any examples you give me.
@idjaw Well.. give me any language and I can give you an example of someone doing a terrible job with that language. Functional programming, or the choice of a language, does not prevent bad code. You can write beautiful code in almost every language. It’s just that doing functional programming properly will give you a lot of benefits for free.
A classic example of fancy itertools functional approach turning out some unreadable sludge, when compared to a simple and naive pure python implementation — wimApr 12 '13 at 5:40
Data.Maybe "The Maybe type encapsulates an optional value. A value of type Maybe a either contains a value of type a (represented as Just a), or it is empty (represented as Nothing). Using Maybe is a good way to deal with errors or exceptional cases without resorting to drastic measures such as error."
let's assume g is a generator and seq is a noisy data source (large) to load next (g) will trigger the execution of the datasource in this context, what is the benefit of generators ?
Sorry @marsouf, but your messages here appear to be a rather incoherent dump of various misunderstandings. It’s really demotivating to continue talking to you about any of these things…
> Admittedly I don't know much about the field besides Haskell, but any language less popular than Haskell surely has very little practical value, and I haven't heard of functional languages more popular than Haskell. - GvR
I swear there was a good meta dupe for "don't post comments linking to your answer under the question", but I can't find it. Re: meta.stackoverflow.com/q/354308
Better pattern: try a thing. Doesn't work. Search google for "python <thing>". Read any and all entries on python.org. Read the next 4 relevant looking entries. If you still don't understand, then say, "hey, this is what I've learned, why am I wrong? Or what do I still not understand?"
When in school, whenever I'd tell people I was starting to learn functional programming, they'd respond with, "oh, I don't know C". They thought "functional" meant "functions only, no classes or methods." Which, since we'd only learned classic OOP languages, makes sense.
This tool would have been useful last week when I was reviewing pull requests for RABBIT and it wouldn't let me get a local copy because my current local copy didn't match what was in the repository, so I just shrugged and deleted all of my changes