Reputation: 39893
I want to pass a Python function to another function with some of its parameters "filled out" ahead of time.
This is simplification what I am doing:
def add(x, y):
return x + y
def increment_factory(i): # create a function that increments by i
return (lambda y: add(i, y))
inc2 = increment_factory(2)
print inc2(3) # prints 5
I don't want to use some sort of passing of args
and later exploding it with *args
because the function I am passing inc2
into doesn't know to pass args
to it.
This feels a bit too clever for a group project... is there a more straightforward or pythonic way to do this?
Thanks!
Upvotes: 19
Views: 9878
Reputation: 257
You could also accomplish the same with a lambda
function:
inc2 = lambda y: add(2, y)
print inc2(3)
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 7153
This is called currying, or partial application. You can use the built-in functools.partial(). Something like the following would do what you want.
import functools
def add(x,y):
return x + y
inc2 = functools.partial(add, 2)
print inc2(3)
Upvotes: 36