Hi, I have been playing with set operations lately and came across a kind of surprising result given that it is not mentioned in the standard Python tutorial:
with python sets, intersections and unions are supposed to be done like this: In [7]:set('casa') & set('porca') Out[7]:set(['a', 'c']) In [8]:set('casa') | set('porca') Out[8]:set(['a', 'c', 'o', 'p', 's', 'r']) and they work correctly. Now what is confusing is that if you do: In [5]:set('casa') and set('porca') Out[5]:set(['a', 'p', 'c', 'r', 'o']) In [6]:set('casa') or set('porca') Out[6]:set(['a', 'c', 's']) The results are not what you would expect from an AND or OR operation, from the mathematical point of view! aparently the "and" operation is returning the the second set, and the "or" operation is returning the first. If python developers wanted these operations to reflect the traditional (Python) truth value for data structures: False for empty data structures and True otherwise, why not return simply True or False? So My question is: Why has this been implemented in this way? I can see this confusing many newbies... -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list