On 12-5-2019 16:07, Piet van Oostrum wrote:
Luuk <l...@invalid.lan> writes:
After thinking about this, (i am prettry new to python), i was doing this:
print(type(5),type(int),type(5)==type(int),type(5)==int)
<class 'int'> <class 'type'> False True
Can someone explain why type(5)==int evaluates to True ?
print(int)
<class 'int'>
The value of int is the class int, which is the class of 5, so type(5) is also
that same class int.
Maybe i should have asked this:
What is the difference between 'type(5)==int' and 'isinstance(5,int)'
and, if there is no difference why did someone invent 'isinstance()' ...
--
Luuk
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