> So a different question... Can it be relied upon that two expressions > which both evaluate to False both return the same object? That is, is > it incorrect for a Python interpreter not to do this? I find this in > the Python Reference Manual: "for immutable types, operations that > compute new values may actually return a reference to any existing > object with the same type and value" (note the "may"). Are bool and > NoneType the only types for which this is reliably the case? Among immutable built-in types, these plus Ellipsis are the only ones. The language doesn't guarantee such a thing for numbers other than bool, strings, unicode or tuples. --Guido van Rossum (home page: http://www.python.org/~guido/)
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