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Start your free trialjames white
78,399 PointsUse a lambda and filter(), create a variable high_cal with items in meals where the "calories" > 1000
Link to Objective: http://teamtreehouse.com/library/functional-python/the-lambda-lambada/lambda-2
I've watch the Lambda video time and again.
I've downloaded the zip and looked at the "stock.py" file, but it deals with
json so it really doesn't match up with any of the objectives (that don't mention json at all)
I don't know...all of Kenneth Love's code examples and objective questions seem so obtuse.
The don't really google well.
I didn't have any difficulties with the python in kat chuang's course:
http://teamtreehouse.com/library/data-science-basics
Another thing:
Did you ever notice that the "preview" (and answer analyzer) for the
python objectives is really awful (either offering nothing or
no really helpful debugging suggestions)?
Anyway, here are some of my attempts (tries)
that all got generic "Bummer!" errors:
high_cal = meals.filter(lambda x: x[1] > 1000)
high_cal = filter( lambda x: x[1] > 1000, meals)
high_cal = filter( lambda calories: calories > 1000, meals)
high_cal = filter( lambda meals: meals.calories > 1000)
2 Answers
akak
29,445 PointsHey,
You are very close. Last one almost there :) Try this:
high_cal = filter(lambda meal: meal['calories'] > 1000, meals)
The first two "meal" could be "x" or in fact almost anything. It's just a name for variable, but you need to point to calories key and then as a second argument for filter put the dict.
james white
78,399 PointsThanks akak,
I knew it was something simple, but I would have spent hours more researching
before thinking to try some single quotes and some brackets.
I guess:
meal['calories']
..refers to the element of the meals' tuple whose value
is associated with the variable 'calories'.
After a bit more research I found this Functional Programming "docs" howto tutorial:
https://docs.python.org/3/howto/functional.html
where there is an example:
import functools
total = functools.reduce(lambda a, b: (0, a[1] + b[1]), items)[1]
Which the docs author says (referring to the example lines of code above):
If you try to do too much in a lambda statement, youβll end up with an overly complicated expression thatβs hard to read
Maybe this stackoverflow thread has the final word about python lambdas:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/890128/why-python-lambdas-are-useful
...where someone named "javier" in the first answer says:
lambda is one of the requisites for a readable functional language. it's a pity that Python's syntax makes them so limited. still, it's miles ahead of any language without it.
James N
17,864 PointsJames N
17,864 Pointshey alak, thanks for the help! i was stuck on this exact codechallenge!