Map
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Applies a simple 1-to-1 mapping function over each element in the collection.
Examples
In the following examples, we create a pipeline with a PCollection of produce with their icon, name, and duration.
Then, we apply Map in multiple ways to transform every element in the PCollection.
Map accepts a function that returns a single element for every input element in the PCollection.
Example 1: Map with a predefined function
We use the function str.strip which takes a single str element and outputs a str.
It strips the input element’s whitespaces, including newlines and tabs.
Example 2: Map with a function
We define a function strip_header_and_newline which strips any '#', ' ', and '\n' characters from each element.
Example 3: Map with a lambda function
We can also use lambda functions to simplify Example 2.
Example 4: Map with multiple arguments
You can pass functions with multiple arguments to Map.
They are passed as additional positional arguments or keyword arguments to the function.
In this example, strip takes text and chars as arguments.
Example 5: MapTuple for key-value pairs
If your PCollection consists of (key, value) pairs,
you can use MapTuple to unpack them into different function arguments.
Example 6: Map with side inputs as singletons
If the PCollection has a single value, such as the average from another computation,
passing the PCollection as a singleton accesses that value.
In this example, we pass a PCollection the value '# \n' as a singleton.
We then use that value as the characters for the str.strip method.
Example 7: Map with side inputs as iterators
If the PCollection has multiple values, pass the PCollection as an iterator.
This accesses elements lazily as they are needed,
so it is possible to iterate over large PCollections that won’t fit into memory.
Note: You can pass the
PCollectionas a list withbeam.pvalue.AsList(pcollection), but this requires that all the elements fit into memory.
Example 8: Map with side inputs as dictionaries
If a PCollection is small enough to fit into memory, then that PCollection can be passed as a dictionary.
Each element must be a (key, value) pair.
Note that all the elements of the PCollection must fit into memory for this.
If the PCollection won’t fit into memory, use beam.pvalue.AsIter(pcollection) instead.
Example 9: Map with setup and bundle contexts.
If an expensive shared object, such as a database connection, is required, this can be passed as a bundle or setup context which is invoked like a Python context manager. For example
Related transforms
- FlatMap behaves the same as
Map, but for each input it may produce zero or more outputs. - Filter is useful if the function is just deciding whether to output an element or not.
- ParDo is the most general elementwise mapping operation, and includes other abilities such as multiple output collections and side-inputs.
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Last updated on 2025/11/05
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