Do you know that it's possible to process iterables without a Loop? The map
method is really useful when you need to perform the same operation on all items of an iterable (list, sets, etc).
The map()
method takes two arguments:
- a function object
- an iterable or multiple iterable
The function passed to the map()
method will perform some action on each element of the iterable passed as an argument.
Example
>>> fruits = ["lemon", "orange", "banana"]
>>> def add_is_a_fruit(fruit):
... return fruit + " is a fruit."
...
>>> new_fruits = map(add_is_a_fruit, fruits)
<map object at 0x7f7fe85e6460>
>>> new_fruits = list(new_fruits)
>>> new_fruits
['lemon is a fruit.', 'orange is a fruit.', 'banana is a fruit.']
Notice that you have to convert the returned map object into an iterable so you can work with it easily.
It's also possible to use map()
with lambda functions.
>>> new_fruits = map(lambda fruit: fruit + " is a fruit.", fruits)
>>> new_fruits = list(new_fruits)
>>> new_fruits
['lemon is a fruit.', 'orange is a fruit.', 'banana is a fruit.']
You can learn more about the method here.
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