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Why does this code give n instead of y?
In one of the code challenges, there is this exercise, but I don't understand why the answer is n instead of y? "What is the output of this code a,b=[1,2],[1,2] if id(a)==id(b): print("y") else: print("n") (Code by Paolo Di Paolo)" Can someone please explain? Thanks!
4 Respuestas
+ 11
Gwendolyn Vervaeke ,
list `a` and list `b` are not the same object, so they have a different id.
run the code below to see this effect here:
a,b=[1,2],[1,2]
print(f'a: {a}, b: {b}')
print(f'id a: {id(a)}, id b: {id(b)}')
if id(a)==id(b):
print("y")
else:
print("n")
+ 3
if you just want to compare if two lists have the same length, same values, and in the same order, you can do
a,b = [1,2],[1,2]
if len(a)==len(b) and all(x == y for (x,y) in zip(a,b)):
print('y')
else:
print('n')
+ 1
Godslove Iwuamadi ,
this is not the place to say hello.
> *q&a* section is meant for raising coding related questions and discussions.
> anything else can be posted in the `feed` in the `community` section.
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Hello