python makes no sense and also nobody here read the questionpic.twitter.com/uHkRqnWukx
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python makes no sense and also nobody here read the questionpic.twitter.com/uHkRqnWukx
I think it's because Python treats True as 1 and False as 0. If we eval within the brackets first it does make some logical sense. And although it makes little sense to compare them, False != 3 (also: True !=3)
Correct, False == 0 evaluates to True and True == 1 evaluates to True. True !=3 evaluates to True though and bool(3) returns True (anything besides the enumerated falsy values is considered true). the expression in the SO question evaluates left-to-right if no brackets are used.
It's so weird that the only language to get booleans so right was (Visual) Basic. True is 0xFFFFFFFF or anything != 0, false is 0 and there is no difference between binary and boolean operators.
for languages like Python where the reference interpreter is written in C, compatability with the C convention of True is alias for 1 and False is alias for 0 is convenient.
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