When I was looking at answers to this question, I found I didn't understand my own answer.
I don't really understand how this is being parsed. Why does the second example return False?
>>> 1 in [1,0] # This is expected
True
>>> 1 in [1,0] == True # This is strange
False
>>> (1 in [1,0]) == True # This is what I wanted it to be
True
>>> 1 in ([1,0] == True) # But it's not just a precedence issue!
# It did not raise an exception on the second example.
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<pyshell#4>", line 1, in <module>
1 in ([1,0] == True)
TypeError: argument of type 'bool' is not iterable
Thanks for any help. I think I must be missing something really obvious.
==binds tighter thanin, so[1,0] == Truegets evaluated first, then the result of that gets fed to1 in other_result. – Marc B Feb 14 '12 at 21:26