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Functional Python Programming, 3rd edition

Functional Python Programming, 3rd edition

By : Steven F. Lott
4.5 (28)
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Functional Python Programming, 3rd edition

Functional Python Programming, 3rd edition

4.5 (28)
By: Steven F. Lott

Overview of this book

Not enough developers understand the benefits of functional programming, or even what it is. Author Steven Lott demystifies the approach, teaching you how to improve the way you code in Python and make gains in memory use and performance. If you’re a leetcoder preparing for coding interviews, this book is for you. Starting from the fundamentals, this book shows you how to apply functional thinking and techniques in a range of scenarios, with Python 3.10+ examples focused on mathematical and statistical algorithms, data cleaning, and exploratory data analysis. You'll learn how to use generator expressions, list comprehensions, and decorators to your advantage. You don't have to abandon object-oriented design completely, though – you'll also see how Python's native object orientation is used in conjunction with functional programming techniques. By the end of this book, you'll be well-versed in the essential functional programming features of Python and understand why and when functional thinking helps. You'll also have all the tools you need to pursue any additional functional topics that are not part of the Python language.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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Preface
16
Other Books You Might Enjoy
17
Index

3.3 Using strings

Since Python strings are immutable, they’re an excellent example of functional programming objects. A Python str object has a number of methods, all of which produce a new string as the result. These methods are pure functions with no side effects.

The syntax for methods is postfix, where most functions are prefix. This mixture of syntax styles means complex string operations can be hard to read when they’re co-mingled with conventional functions. For example, in this expression, len(variable.title()), the title() method is in postfix notation and the len() function is in prefix notation. (We touched on this in Chapter 2, Introducing Essential Functional Concepts, in the Familiar territory section.)

When scraping data from a web page, we may have a function to clean the data. This could apply a number of transformations to a string to clean up the punctuation and return a Decimal object for use by the rest of the application. This will involve a mixture...

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