Everyone knows i'm a Python fanboy so nobody can call me a troll for this...
Python map is just completely useless. For one it so damn slow why even bother putting it in the language? And secondly, the total "girl- man" weakness of lambda renders it completely mute! Ruby has a very nice map >>> [1,2,3].map{|x| x.to_s} Have not done any benchmarking but far more useful from the programmers POV. And that really stinks because map is such a useful tool it's a shame to waste it. Here are some test to back up the rant. >>> import time >>> def test1(): l = range(10000) t1 = time.time() map(lambda x:x+1, l) t2= time.time() print t2-t1 >>> def test2(): l = range(10000) t1 = time.time() for x in l: x + 1 t2 = time.time() print t2-t1 >>> test1() 0.00200009346008 >>> test2() 0.000999927520752 >>> def test3(): l = range(10000) t1 = time.time() map(str, l) t2= time.time() print t2-t1 >>> def test4(): l = range(10000) t1 = time.time() for x in l: str(x) t2= time.time() print t2-t1 >>> test3() 0.00300002098083 >>> test4() 0.00399994850159 >>> So can anyone explain this poor excuse for a map function? Maybe GVR should have taken it out in 3.0? *scratches head* -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list