Understanding boolean expressions

Boolean expression syntax is a little bit weird or unusual, at least in Python:

print (1 == 3)

The output of the above code is as follows:

False

As usual, we have the double equal symbol that can test for equality between two values. So does 1 equal 3, no it doesn't, therefore False. The value False is a special value designated by F. Remember that when you're trying to test, when you're doing Boolean stuff, the relevant keywords are True with a T and False with an F. That's a little bit different from other languages that I've worked with, so keep that in mind.

print (True or False)

The output of the above code is as follows:

True

Well, True or False is True, because one of them is True, you run it and it comes back True.

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