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python - How does reduce function work?

As far as I understand, the reduce function takes a list l and a function f. Then, it calls the function f on first two elements of the list and then repeatedly calls the function f with the next list element and the previous result.

So, I define the following functions:

The following function computes the factorial.

def fact(n):
    if n == 0 or n == 1:
        return 1
    return fact(n-1) * n


def reduce_func(x,y):
    return fact(x) * fact(y)

lst = [1, 3, 1]
print reduce(reduce_func, lst)

Now, shouldn't this give me ((1! * 3!) * 1!) = 6? But, instead it gives 720. Why 720? It seems to take the factorial of 6 too. But, I need to understand why.

Can someone explains why this happens and a work-around?

I basically want to compute the product of factorials of all the entries in the list. The backup plan is to run a loop and compute it. But, I would prefer using reduce.

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The other answers are great. I'll simply add an illustrated example that I find pretty good to understand reduce():

>>> reduce(lambda x,y: x+y, [47,11,42,13])
113

will be computed as follows:

enter image description here

(Source) (mirror)


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