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>>> # The not operator is the opposite of it
>>> not True
False
>>> not False
True
>>> # The and operator is True only if both are are true
>>> True and True
True
>>> False and True
False
>>> False and False
False
>>> # The or operator is True if either of them are true
>>> True or True
True
>>> False or True
True
>>> False or False
False
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>>> type(True)
<class 'bool'>
>>> type(true)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<interactive input>", line 1, in <module>
NameError: name 'true' is not defined
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The Python Boolean type is one of Python's built-in data types. It's used to represent the truth value of an expression. For example, the expression 1 <= 2 is True , while the expression 0 == 1 is False .
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x = bool(0)
y = bool(1)
print(x, y)#It will show "TRUE False" as through the boolean it's done.
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a = True # dont forget capital T and F, it is case sensitive
b = False
if b == True:
print("b is true")
if b:
print("b is true") # this is the shorthand of the above IF statement
if b == False:
print("b is false") # again dont forget True and False are case sensitive
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password = "12345"
confirm_password = "12345"
print(password == confirm_password)