The brackets don't make it a tuple - the comma does. Consider:
>>> 5 * (3 + 2)
25
The brackets there mean 'do this first'. The brackets in:
b=(a)
Mean the same. So, this is equivalent to
b = a
so b is a
will be True
.
To make b
a tuple containing the empty tuple, you need to do:
b = a,
Again, the brackets don't make it a tuple (except for the special case of ()
is the empty tuple), the comma does.
For the edit,
c = (a, 1)
Since a = ()
, this is the same as:
c = ((), 1)
ie, it is a tuple containing the empty tuple and 1
. ()
is always the empty tuple (same as []
is the empty list), but this it the only time the brackets mean 'tuple'. The above is the same as:
c = (), 1
Though normally people do include the brackets here (and the repr
and str
of tuples always do), this is for style rather than because they're meaningful.