if <boolean> :
# do this
boolean has to be either True or False.
then why
if "poi":
print "yes"
output: yes
i didn't get why yes is printing , since "poi" is nether True or False.
if <boolean> :
# do this
boolean has to be either True or False.
then why
if "poi":
print "yes"
output: yes
i didn't get why yes is printing , since "poi" is nether True or False.
Python will do its best to evaluate the "truthiness" of an expression when a boolean value is needed from that expression.
The rule for strings is that an empty string is considered False
, a non-empty string is considered True
. The same rule is imposed on other containers, so an empty dictionary or list is considered False
, a dictionary or list with one or more entries is considered True
.
The None
object is also considered false.
A numerical value of 0
is considered false (although a string value of '0'
is considered true).
All other expressions are considered True
.
Details (including how user-defined types can specify truthiness) can be found here: http://docs.python.org/release/2.5.2/lib/truth.html.
false
in a boolean context. This is pretty close to the same thing as imposing the same rule even on user-defined classes (you'd have to deliberately return some non-intuitive value from your __len__() method, or leave it out entirely, to avoid following the same rule as built-ins).
Aug 28, 2013 at 15:26
'a' or 'b'
returning 'a'
instead of True
, note that and
and or
are "short circuit operators", and "When used as a general value and not as a Boolean, the return value of a short-circuit operator is the last evaluated argument." Since 'a'
evaluates as True
, the whole expression must be true, and so the truth value of 'b'
is not even evaluated. docs.python.org/3.6/tutorial/…
Feb 20, 2017 at 0:40
In python, any string except an empty string defaults to True
ie,
if "MyString":
# this will print foo
print("foo")
if "":
# this will NOT print foo
print("foo")
True
" is not really correct. How about "evaluates to True
in a Boolean context"?
Aug 28, 2013 at 15:20
What is happening here is Python' supplement of implicit bool()
constructor after the if
, Because anything followed by if
should be resolved to be boolean. In this context your code is equivalent to
if bool("hello"):
print "yes"
According to Python bool(x)
constructor accepts anything and decides the truthiness based on below cases
0
is False
everything else is True
0.0
is False
everything else is True`[]
is False
everything else is True
{}
is False
everything else is True
()
is False
everything else is True
“"
is False
everything else is True
. Be aware that bool(“False”)
will return to True
Here is the log for the cases I listed above
Python 3.4.3 (default, Feb 25 2015, 21:28:45)
[GCC 4.2.1 Compatible Apple LLVM 6.0 (clang-600.0.56)] on darwin
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> bool(0)
False
>>> bool(1)
True
>>> bool(-1)
True
>>> bool(0.0)
False
>>> bool(0.02)
True
>>> bool(-0.10)
True
>>> bool([])
False
>>> bool([1,2])
True
>>> bool(())
False
>>> bool(("Hello","World"))
True
>>> bool({})
False
>>> bool({1,2,3})
True
>>> bool({1:"One", 2:"Two"})
True
>>> bool("")
False
>>> bool("Hello")
True
>>> bool("False")
True