Steven D'Aprano wrote: > On Sat, 02 Jul 2005 20:26:31 -0700, Devan L wrote: > > >> Claiming that sum etc. do the same job is the whimper of >>someone who doesn't want to openly disagree with Guido. >> >>Could you give an example where sum cannot do the job(besides the >>previously mentioned product situation? > > > There is an infinite number of potential lambdas, and therefore an > infinite number of uses for reduce. > > > > sum only handles a single case, lambda x,y: x+y > > product adds a second case: lambda x,y: x*y > > So sum and product together cover precisely 2/infinity, or zero percent, > of all possible uses of reduce.
But together, sum and product, probably cover about 90% of situations in which you would use reduce. Getting a total (sum) from a list probably covers 80% of the situations reduce would be used on it's own. (I can't think of any real uses of product at the moment. It's late.) I'm just estimating, but I think that is the gist of adding those two in exchange for reduce. Not that they will replace all of reduce use cases, but that sum and product cover most situations and can be implemented more efficiently than using reduce or a for loop to do the same thing. The other situations can easily be done using for loops, so it's really not much of a loss. Ron -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list