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Why 'none' is considered special in python???
3 Réponses
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None is just a value that commonly is used to signify 'empty', or 'no value here'. It is a signal object; it only has meaning because the Python documentation says it has that meaning.
There is only one copy of that object in a given Python interpreter session.
If you write a function, and that function doesn't use an explicit return statement, None is returned instead, for example. That way, programming with functions is much simplified; a function always returns something, even if it is only that one None object.
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It's a placeholder
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thanks @Maninder Singh and @PureLogicality