On Fri, Mar 13, 2020 at 4:55 AM Stephen Tucker <stephen_tuc...@sil.org> wrote: > > A quickie (I hope!). > > I am running Python 2.7.10 (and, yes, I know, support for it has been > withdrawn.)
This is the same in Python 3. > I have three tuples that have been generated separately and I want to check > that they are identical. all I want to do is to terminate the program and > report an error if all three are not identical. > > My initial attempt to do this is to use logic of the form > > if not (mytup1 == mytup2 == mytup3): > raise Exception ("Tuples are not identical") > > I have tried this logic form in IDLE, and it seems to do what I want. > > Is this a reasonable way to do this, or is there a better way? > Yes absolutely! (Although, as a minor quibble, I would say "equal" rather than "identical" here - when you talk about identity, you're usually using the 'is' operator.) The meaning of chained comparisons is broadly equivalent to comparing the middle one against the others ("a==b==c" is "a==b and b==c"), which does the right thing here. It's slightly unusual to negate a query rather than using "!=", but it makes good sense here. ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list