Iam wondering why the peculiar behavior of map when the function in given as None:
Help on built-in function map in module __builtin__: map(...) map(function, sequence[, sequence, ...]) -> list Return a list of the results of applying the function to the items of the argument sequence(s). If more than one sequence is given, the function is called with an argument list consisting of the corresponding item of each sequence, substituting None for missing values when not all sequences have the same length. If the function is None, return a list of the items of the sequence (or a list of tuples if more than one sequence). It seems as the action whith none is the same as using a function of lambda *x: x As in the following example: >>> l1 = 'asdf' >>> l2 = 'qwertyuip' >>> l3 = range(3) >>> l1,l2,l3 ('asdf', 'qwertyuip', [0, 1, 2]) >>> map(lambda *x: x, l1,l2,l3) == map(None, l1,l2,l3) True >>> On looking up map on Wikipedia there is no mention of this special behaviour, So my question is why? Thanks, Paddy. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list