98

When storing a bool in memcached through python-memcached I noticed that it's returned as an integer. Checking the code of the library showed me that there is a place where isinstance(val, int) is checked to flag the value as an integer.

So I tested it in the python shell and noticed the following:

>>> isinstance(True, int)
True
>>> issubclass(bool, int)
True

But why exactly is bool a subclass of int?

It kind of makes sense because a boolean basically is an int which can just take two values but it needs much less operations/space than an actual integer (no arithmetics, only a single bit of storage space)....

3
  • 12
    Here's Alex Martelli's take on a related question. Nov 17, 2011 at 14:48
  • 2
    It's worth noting that since in Python, everything is an object, with the overhead that employs, it's pretty much pointless to try to save space by making bools smaller. If you cared about memory use, you'd be using a different language to begin with.
    – kindall
    Nov 17, 2011 at 17:35
  • Also there's only one copy of True and False in the entire process, so saving a few bytes on those two specific objects would have basically no impact on anything. Jan 25 at 19:05

3 Answers 3

111

From a comment on http://www.peterbe.com/plog/bool-is-int

It is perfectly logical, if you were around when the bool type was added to python (sometime around 2.2 or 2.3).

Prior to introduction of an actual bool type, 0 and 1 were the official representation for truth value, similar to C89. To avoid unnecessarily breaking non-ideal but working code, the new bool type needed to work just like 0 and 1. This goes beyond merely truth value, but all integral operations. No one would recommend using a boolean result in a numeric context, nor would most people recommend testing equality to determine truth value, no one wanted to find out the hard way just how much existing code is that way. Thus the decision to make True and False masquerade as 1 and 0, respectively. This is merely a historical artifact of the linguistic evolution.

Credit goes to dman13 for this nice explanation.

2
  • 3
    Note that this might be historically true, but idiomatically you see a lot of sum([f(value) for value in values]) where f(x) is some sort of filter function and you need to see how many values pass the filter.
    – Adam Smith
    Dec 29, 2015 at 0:48
  • 5
    Personally I would rather write sum(1 for value in values if f(value)), but I've actually seen respected people advocate in favor of numerical operations on bools. Jun 10, 2016 at 7:28
32

See PEP 285 -- Adding a bool type. Relevent passage:

6) Should bool inherit from int?

=> Yes.

In an ideal world, bool might be better implemented as a separate integer type that knows how to perform mixed-mode arithmetic. However, inheriting bool from int eases the implementation enormously (in part since all C code that calls PyInt_Check() will continue to work -- this returns true for subclasses of int).

0

Can also use help to check the Bool's value in Console:

help(True)

help(True)
Help on bool object:
class bool(int)
 |  bool(x) -> bool
 |  
 |  Returns True when the argument x is true, False otherwise.
 |  The builtins True and False are the only two instances of the class bool.
 |  The class bool is a subclass of the class int, and cannot be subclassed.
 |  
 |  Method resolution order:
 |      bool
 |      int
 |      object
 |  

help(False)

help(False)
Help on bool object:
class bool(int)
 |  bool(x) -> bool
 |  
 |  Returns True when the argument x is true, False otherwise.
 |  The builtins True and False are the only two instances of the class bool.
 |  The class bool is a subclass of the class int, and cannot be subclassed.
 |  
 |  Method resolution order:
 |      bool
 |      int
 |      object
1
  • 1
    You might want to comment out the help text so that it isn't syntax highlighted.
    – Nirvana
    Nov 15, 2021 at 19:33

Your Answer

Reminder: Answers generated by Artificial Intelligence tools are not allowed on Stack Overflow. Learn more

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.