memilanuk <memila...@gmail.com> writes: > ... > lambda: update_label2('A', 100) > > would this work the same?
(I don't know what you mean here by “the same”; the same as what?) The above creates a new function, which expects no parameters (because there are no parameters before its ‘:’). The function, when called, will return the value of the expression ‘update_label2('A', 100)’. > It looks as though it'd be passing the same two parameters to the same > function... Yes, it looks that way, and that's what it does. The parameters are fixed in the expression and will be the same each time the new function is called. > lambda: 'A', 100: update_label2() This is a syntax error. Have you tried experimenting with these? Carefully read the reference material on the ‘lambda’ syntax, and create some functions and experiment with them. -- \ “Not to be absolutely certain is, I think, one of the essential | `\ things in rationality.” —Bertrand Russell | _o__) | Ben Finney -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list