58

A Python newbie question, why is this syntax invalid: lambda: pass, while this: def f(): pass is correct?

Thanks for your insight.

4 Answers 4

60

lambdas can only contain expressions - basically, something that can appear on the right-hand side of an assignment statement. pass is not an expression - it doesn't evaluate to a value, and a = pass is never legal.

Another way of thinking about it is, because lambdas implicitly return the result of their body, lambda: pass is actually equivalent to:

def f(): return pass 

Which doesn't make sense. If you really do need a no-op lambda for some reason, do lambda: None instead.

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2 Comments

That makes sense, thanks! But then, since lambda: None still returns a value, is there any way I can define an anonymous function that behaves exactly like def f(): pass?
@Rez it is actually the same - all Python functions return a value; if they fall off the end, or reach a bare return, they return None.
49

That is an error because after the colon you have to put the return value, so:

lambda: pass 

is equal to:

def f(): return pass 

that indeed makes no sense and produces a SyntaxError as well.

Comments

33

The return value of a function without a return statement is None. You can see this from the simple pass function that is defined in the OP:

>>> def f(): ... pass ... >>> print f() None 

If you are looking for a lambda function that is equivalent to this "no-op" function, then you can use:

lambda: None 

For example:

>>> f = lambda: None >>> print f() None 

Comments

-1

If you want to use a lambda you could rely on the Ellipsis literal ....

Your lambda would become lambda: ....

The Ellipsis literal is often used instead of pass.

1 Comment

I was curious why this got downvoted and it looks like ... refers to an instance of an actual ellipsis type :o

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