I'm just getting into Python and I really like the terseness of the syntax. However, is there an easier way of writing an if
-then
-else
statement so it fits on one line?
For example:
if count == N:
count = 0
else:
count = N + 1
Is there a simpler way of writing this? I mean, in Objective-C I would write this as:
count = count == N ? 0 : count + 1;
Is there something similar for Python?
Update
I know that in this instance I can use count == (count + 1) % N
.
I'm asking about the general syntax.
count = count == N ? 0 : N + 1;
instead ofcount = count == N ? 0 : count + 1;
? – Tim Pietzcker Jul 20 '15 at 15:42if 1==1: print('hi')
can be just used like that. And'''if 1==1: print('hi')'''
will print nothing! – Apostolos Apr 15 '18 at 15:50count == (count + 1) % N
used to do. Currently it just evaluatescount == (count + 1)
(which is, naturally, results inFalse
all the time). I've checked in Python 3.6.1 and Python 2.7.10. – user8554766 Jul 9 '18 at 7:05