I came across this problem statement in 'Think Python' book by Allan Downey:
Write a boolean function called is_after that takes two Time objects,
t1
andt2
, and returns True ift1
followst2
chronologically and False otherwise. Challenge: don't use anif
statement.
I wrote this code which seems to work fine:
class Time:
def __init__(self , hour , min , sec):
self.hour = hour
self.min = min
self.sec = sec
def is_after(t1 , t2):
if t1.hour > t2.hour:
return True
elif t1.hour == t2.hour:
if t1.min > t2.min:
return True
elif t1.min == t2.min:
if t1.sec > t2.sec:
return True
else:
return False
else:
return False
else:
return False
But the author challenges the reader to accomplish the comparison without using a conditional operator. I can't imagine how can a comparison even be done without using if/else
statements.
return a < b
True
: Eithert1.hour < t2.hour
ort1.hour == t2.hour
andt1.min < t2.min
....t1
followst2
chronologically and False otherwise" but you returnTrue
whent1.hour < t2.hour
...