Note: The attached image is a screenshot of page 31 of Dr. Charles Severance’s book, Python for Everybody: Exploring Data Using Python 3 (2024-01-01 Revision).
I thought =
was a mathematical operator, not a logical operator; why does Python use
=
instead of ==
, or
<=
instead of <==
, or
!=
instead of !==
?
Thanks in advance for any clarification. I would have posted this in the help forums of FreeCodeCamp, but I wasn’t sure if this question was too…unspecified(?) for that domain.
Cheers!
Edit: I think I get it now! Thanks so much to everyone for helping, and @FizzyOrange@programming.dev and @itslilith@lemmy.blahaj.zone in particular! ^_^
It’s a convention set by early programming languages.
In most C-like languages,
if (a = b)...
is also a valid comparison. The=
(assignment) operation returns the assigned value as a result, which is then converted to a boolean value by theif
expression. Consider this Javascript code:let a = b = 1
b
variable and assigns it the value of the expression1
, which is one.b = 1
, which is the assigned value, which is1
.a
variable and assigns the previously returned value, which is1
.Another example:
let a = 1 let b = 2 let c = 3 console.log(a == b) // prints "false" because the comparison is false console.log(a = b) // prints 2 because the expression returns the value of the assignment, which is 'b', which is 2 // Using this in an 'if' statement: if (b = c) { // the result of the assignment is 3, which is converted to a boolean true console.log("what") }
You can’t do the same in Python (it will fail with a syntax error), but it’s better to adhere to convention because it doesn’t hurt anyone, but going against it might confuse programmers who have greater experience with another language.
With python you can use the := to assign and return new value.
Walrus operator my beloved