In Python, if I write
z = 1 and 2
print z
Then it yields "2".
But if I write
z = 0 and 2
print z
Now, it yields "0".
It may not be much important in real life problem, but I'm trying to understand the logic here.
In Python, if I write
z = 1 and 2
print z
Then it yields "2".
But if I write
z = 0 and 2
print z
Now, it yields "0".
It may not be much important in real life problem, but I'm trying to understand the logic here.
0
, []
, ""
are all false-ish (they are treated as False
in a python condition). and
returns the first false-ish value or the last one. This is called short-circuit evaluation. That's why in one case it returns 2
(the last) and in the other it returns 0
(the false-ish).
In fact if you think about the logic operation, you can short-circuit this behaviour:
x and y (with x false-ish) -> x
x and y (with x true-ish) -> y
When plugged into a condition it will evaluate as:
x
which is False
. This is the correct result for the and
operation, since False and y
= False
for any y
.y
. Since x
is True, the result of and
should be False
when y
is False
and True
when y
is True
(it reflects the value of y
).c = a and b
is the same as
if a:
c=b
else:
c=a
I think more interesting is or
:
c = a or b
is the same as
if a:
c=a
else:
c=b
Note also that if a:
is a short way of if bool(a):
. bool
returns False
for this objects/values:
None, 0, False, "", [], tuple(), dict(), set()
As you can see, they are all somehow empty...
The and
operator in python short circuits. That is: it only evaluates enough operands (from left to right) as are necessary to determine whether the outcome is True or False. The result of and
is False so in the second case, where 0 evaluates to False, and returns 0, but as 1 is True, the second operand must also be evaluated and returned.
0 is treated as False and anything above zero is treated as True so z = 1 and 2 sets z equal to 2 and z = 0 and 2 is 0 because it evaluates to False.