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mirror of https://github.com/satwikkansal/wtfpython synced 2024-11-22 02:54:25 +01:00

Extend the explanation of the "is not ..." section

I thought that the explanation for "'something' is (not None)" could
be a little more explicit.
This commit is contained in:
Lars Kellogg-Stedman 2020-01-19 10:13:50 -05:00
parent de113d2491
commit f20be4cfc4

2
README.md vendored
View File

@ -933,7 +933,7 @@ False
#### 💡 Explanation
- `is not` is a single binary operator, and has behavior different than using `is` and `not` separated.
- `is not` evaluates to `False` if the variables on either side of the operator point to the same object and `True` otherwise.
- `is not` evaluates to `False` if the variables on either side of the operator point to the same object and `True` otherwise. In this expression, `(not None)` evaluates to `True`, since `None` is is `False` in a boolean context, so the expression becomes `'something' is True`.
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