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Functional Python Programming, 3rd edition - Third Edition

You're reading from  Functional Python Programming, 3rd edition - Third Edition

Product type Book
Published in Dec 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803232577
Pages 576 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Steven F. Lott Steven F. Lott
Profile icon Steven F. Lott

Table of Contents (18) Chapters

Preface
1. Chapter 1: Understanding Functional Programming 2. Chapter 2: Introducing Essential Functional Concepts 3. Chapter 3: Functions, Iterators, and Generators 4. Chapter 4: Working with Collections 5. Chapter 5: Higher-Order Functions 6. Chapter 6: Recursions and Reductions 7. Chapter 7: Complex Stateless Objects 8. Chapter 8: The Itertools Module 9. Chapter 9: Itertools for Combinatorics – Permutations and Combinations 10. Chapter 10: The Functools Module 11. Chapter 11: The Toolz Package 12. Chapter 12: Decorator Design Techniques 13. Chapter 13: The PyMonad Library 14. Chapter 14: The Multiprocessing, Threading, and Concurrent.Futures Modules 15. Chapter 15: A Functional Approach to Web Services 16. Other Books You Might Enjoy
17. Index

 6
Recursions and Reductions

Many functional programming language compilers will optimize a recursive function to transform a recursive call in the tail of the function to an iteration. This tail-call optimization will dramatically improve performance. Python doesn’t do this automatic tail-call optimization. One consequence is pure recursion suffers from limitations. Lacking an automated optimization, we need to do the tail-call optimization manually. This means rewriting recursion to use an explicit iteration. There are two common ways to do this, and we’ll consider them both in this chapter.

In previous chapters, we’ve looked at several related kinds of processing design patterns; some of them are as follows:

  • Mapping and filtering, which create collections from collections

  • Reductions that create a scalar value from a collection

The distinction is exemplified by functions such as map() and filter() that accomplish the first kind of collection processing. There...

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