isinstance(False, int)
Jean-Michel Pichavant
jeanmichel at sequans.com
Fri Mar 5 13:54:10 EST 2010
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Fri, 05 Mar 2010 18:14:16 +0100, mk wrote:
>
>
>>>>> isinstance(False, int)
>>>>>
>> True
>> >>>
>> >>> isinstance(True, int)
>> True
>>
>> Huh?
>>
>
> Yes. Do you have an actual question?
>
>
>
>> >>> issubclass(bool, int)
>> True
>>
>> Huh?!
>>
>
> Exactly.
>
> Bools are a late-comer to Python. For historical and implementation
> reasons, they are a subclass of int, because it was normal for people to
> use 0 and 1 as boolean flags, and so making False == 0 and True == 1 was
> the least likely to break code.
>
> E.g. back in the day, you would have something like:
>
> {2:None}.has_key(2) -> 1
>
> So folks would do:
>
> print "The key is", ["missing", "present"][d.has_key(key)]
>
> Which still works even now that has_key returns True or False rather than
> 1 or 0.
>
>
>
Despite there are good reasons for bool to be int, the newcomer 'wtf'
reaction at first glance is legitimate.
Starting python from scratch, booleans would have not been a subclass of
int (just guessing though), 'cause it makes no sense from a design POV.
Booleans are not ints, 0 does not *mean* False and veracity is not
quantification.
JM
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