It's tempting to think that if statements always need a comparison operator like ==
or !=
, but this isn't true.
If you're just checking if a value is truthy or falsey, you don't need == True
or == False
.
# instead of this...
if user_input.startswith('y') == True:
my_func(user_input)
# ...write this
if user_input.startswith('y'):
my_func(user_input)
# for false conditions, instead of this...
if user_input.startswith('y') == False:
my_func(user_input)
# ...just use `not`
if not user_input.startswith('y'):
my_func(user_input)
This also applies to expressions that use is True
or is False
.