7.1. Boolean Values and Boolean Expressions¶
The Python type for storing true and false values is called bool
,
named after the British mathematician, George Boole. George Boole
created Boolean Algebra, which is the basis of all modern computer
arithmetic.
There are only two boolean values. They are True
and
False
. Capitalization is important, since true
and false
are not boolean values (remember Python is case sensitive).
print(str(True))
print(str(False))
(ch05_1)
Note
Boolean values are not strings!
It is extremely important to realize that True and False are not
strings. They are not surrounded by quotes. They are the only
two values in the data type bool
.
A boolean expression is an expression that evaluates to a boolean
value. The equality operator, ==
, compares two values and
produces a boolean value related to whether the two values are equal
to one another.
print(str(5 == 5))
print(str(5 == 6))
(ch05_2)
In the first statement, the two operands are equal, so the expression
evaluates to True
. In the second statement, 5 is not equal to 6,
so we get False
.
The ==
operator is one of six common comparison operators; the
others are:
x != y # x is not equal to y
x > y # x is greater than y
x < y # x is less than y
x >= y # x is greater than or equal to y
x <= y # x is less than or equal to y
Although these operations are probably familiar to you, the Python
symbols are different from the mathematical symbols. A common error is
to use a single equal sign (=
) instead of a double equal sign
(==
). Remember that =
is an assignment operator and ==
is
a comparison operator. Also, there is no such thing as =<
or
=>
.
Note too that an equality test is symmetric, but assignment is
not. For example, if a == 7
then 7 == a
. But in Python, the
statement a = 7
is legal and 7 = a
is not. (Can you explain
why?)
Check your understanding
select-1-1: Which of the following is a Boolean expression? Select all that apply.