Boolean values are commonly produced by Python’s relational operators which can be used for comparing objects. Two of the most widely used relational operators are Python's equality and inequality tests, which actually test for equivalence or inequivalence of values. That is, two objects are equivalent if one could use used in place of the other. We'll learn more about the notion of object equivalence later in the book. For now, we'll compare simple integers.
Let's start by assigning — or binding — a value to a variable g
:
>>> g = 20
We test for equality with ==
as shown in the following command:
>>> g == 20 True >>> g == 13 False
For inequality we use !=
:
>>> g != 20 False >>> g != 13 True
We can also compare the order of quantities using the rich comparison operators. Use <
to determine if the first argument is less than the second:
>>> g < 30 True
Likewise, use >
to determine if the first is greater than the second:
>>> g > 30 False
You can test less-than or equal-to with <=
:
>>> g <= 20 True
We can use the greater-than or equal-to with >=
,shown as follows:
>>> g >= 20 True
If you have experience with relational operators from other languages, then Python's operators are probably not surprising at all. Just remember that these operators are comparing equivalence, not identity, a distinction we'll cover in detail in coming chapters.