First-class functions
Functional programming is often succinct and expressive. One way to achieve it is by providing functions as arguments and return values for other functions. We'll look at numerous examples of manipulating functions.
For this to work, functions must be first-class objects in the runtime environment. In programming languages such as C, a function is not a runtime object. In Python, however, functions are objects that are created (usually) by the def
statements and can be manipulated by other Python functions. We can also create a function as a callable object or by assigning lambda
to a variable.
Here's how a function definition creates an object with attributes:
>>> def example(a, b, **kw):
... return a*b
...
>>> type(example)
<class 'function'>
>>> example.__code__.co_varnames
('a', 'b', 'kw')
>>> example.__code__.co_argcount
2
We've created an object, example
, that is of the function()
class. This object has numerous attributes...