Python Boolean Values
- Booleans represent one of two values:
True
orFalse
. - In programming you often need to know if an expression is
True
orFalse
. - You can evaluate any expression in Python, and get one of two answers,
True
orFalse
. - When you compare two values, the expression is evaluated and Python returns the Boolean answer:
Example of Boolean Expressions
print(10 > 9) print(10 == 9) print(10 < 9)
When you run a condition in an if statement, Python returns True
or False
:
Example of Boolean Expressions using if else
Print a message based on whether the condition is True
or False
:
a = 200 b = 33 if b > a: print("b is greater than a") else: print("b is not greater than a")
Evaluate Values and Variables
The bool()
function allows you to evaluate any value, and give you True
or False
in return,
Example of Casting String and Number Literals into Boolean values
Evaluate a string and a number:
print(bool("Namastey")) print(bool(15))
Example of Casting String and Number Variable into Boolean values
Evaluate two variables:
x = "Namastey" y = 15 print(bool(x)) print(bool(y))
Most Values are True
Almost any value is evaluated to True
if it has some sort of content.
Any string is True
, except empty strings.
Any number is True
, except 0
.
Any list, tuple, set, and dictionary are True
, except empty ones.
Example
The following will return True:
bool("abc") bool(123) bool(["apple", "cherry", "banana"])
Some Values are False
In fact, there are not many values that evaluate to False
, except empty values, such as ()
, []
, {}
, ""
, the number 0
, and the value None
. And of course the value False
evaluates to False
.
Example
The following will return False:
bool(False) bool(None) bool(0) bool("") bool(()) bool([]) bool({})
One more value, or object in this case, evaluates to False
, and that is if you have an object that is made from a class with a __len__
function that returns 0
or False
:
Example
class myclass(): def __len__(self): return 0 myobj = myclass() print(bool(myobj))
Functions can Return a Boolean
You can create functions that returns a Boolean Value:
Example
Print the answer of a function:
def myFunction() : return True print(myFunction())
You can execute code based on the Boolean answer of a function:
Example
Print “YES!” if the function returns True, otherwise print “NO!”:
def myFunction() : return True if myFunction(): print("YES!") else: print("NO!")
Python also has many built-in functions that return a boolean value, like the isinstance()
function, which can be used to determine if an object is of a certain data type:
Example
Check if an object is an integer or not:
x = 200 print(isinstance(x, int))
Ref: https://docs.python.org/3/c-api/bool.html