I started another thread because the last one was !@#$'ed up by
irrelevant replies and was difficult to jeep track.
>>> name="abcd"
>>> month="efgh"
>>> year="ijkl"
>>> print(name or month or year)
abcd
Can understand that, it takes the first string out of the 3 strings that
has a truthy value.
>>> print("k" in (name and month and year))
True
No clue. since the expression in parenthesis returns 'abcd' how can 'k'
contained within 'abcd' ?
>>> print(name and month and year)
ijkl
Seems here is returning the last string out of 3 strings, but have no
clue why Python doing this.
>>> print("k" in (name and month and year))
True
>>>
yes, since expression returns 'ijkl', then the in operator can detect
the 'k' character within the returned string.
This is all iw ant to know.
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What is now proved was at first only imagined!
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