Reputation: 22893
I need to print some stuff only when a boolean variable is set to True
. So, after looking at this, I tried with a simple example:
>>> a = 100
>>> b = True
>>> print a if b
File "<stdin>", line 1
print a if b
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
Same thing if I write print a if b==True
.
What am I missing here?
Upvotes: 605
Views: 1437139
Reputation: 7484
print a if b
File "<stdin>", line 1
print a if b
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
Answer
If your print
statement must print an empty line when the expression is false, the correct syntax is:
print(a if b else '')
The reason is you're using the conditional expression which has two mandatory clauses, one when b
is true preceding if
, one when b
is false following else
.
Both clauses are themselves expressions. The conditional expression is also called the ternary operator, making it clear it operates on three elements, a condition and two expressions. In your code the else
part is missing.
However I guess your idea was not to print an empty line when the expression was false, but to do nothing. In that case you have to use print
within a conditional statement, in order to condition its execution to the result of the evaluation of b
.
Details: Expression vs. statement
The conditional statement can be used without the else
part:
The if
statement is a compound statement with further instructions to execute depending on the result of the condition evaluation.
It is not required to have an else
clause where the appropriate additional instructions are provided. Without it, when the condition is false no further instructions are executed after the test.
The conditional expression is an expression. Any expression must be convertible to a final value, regardless of the subsequent use of this value by subsequent statements (here the print
statement).
Python makes no assumption about what should be the value of the expression when the condition is false.
You could have used an if
statement this way:
if b: print(a)
Note the difference:
There is no instructions executed by the if
statement when the condition is false, nothing is printed because print
is not called.
In a print
statement with a conditional expression print(a if b else '')
, print
is always executed. What it prints is the if
conditional expression. This expression is evaluated prior to executing the print
statement. So print
outputs an empty line when the condition is false.
Note your other attempt print(a if b==True)
is just equivalent to the first one.
Since b==True
is syntactically equivalent to b
, I guess Python interpreter just replaces the former by the latter before execution. Your second attempt likely comes down to a repeat of the first one.
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 7841
You can use:
print (1==2 and "only if condition true" or "in case condition is false")
Just as well you can keep going like:
print (1==2 and "aa" or ((2==3) and "bb" or "cc"))
Real world example:
>>> print ("%d item%s found." % (count, (count!=1 and 's' or '')))
1 item found.
>>> count = 2
>>> print ("%d item%s found." % (count, (count!=1 and 's' or '')))
2 items found.
Upvotes: 15
Reputation: 849
You can write an inline ternary operator like so:
sure = True
# inline operator
is_true = 'yes' if sure else 'no'
# print the outcome
print(is_true)
Upvotes: 20
Reputation: 629
hmmm, you can do it with a list comprehension. This would only make sense if you had a real range.. but it does do the job:
print([a for i in range(0,1) if b])
or using just those two variables:
print([a for a in range(a,a+1) if b])
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1922
This can be done with string formatting. It works with the % notation as well as .format() and f-strings (new to 3.6)
print '%s' % (a if b else "")
or
print '{}'.format(a if b else "")
or
print(f'{a if b else ""}')
Upvotes: 15
Reputation: 7896
If you don't want to from __future__ import print_function
you can do the following:
a = 100
b = True
print a if b else "", # Note the comma!
print "see no new line"
Which prints:
100 see no new line
If you're not aversed to from __future__ import print_function
or are using python 3 or later:
from __future__ import print_function
a = False
b = 100
print(b if a else "", end = "")
Adding the else is the only change you need to make to make your code syntactically correct, you need the else for the conditional expression (the "in line if else blocks")
The reason I didn't use None
or 0
like others in the thread have used, is because using None/0
would cause the program to print None
or print 0
in the cases where b
is False
.
If you want to read about this topic I've included a link to the release notes for the patch that this feature was added to Python.
The 'pattern' above is very similar to the pattern shown in PEP 308:
This syntax may seem strange and backwards; why does the condition go in the middle of the expression, and not in the front as in C's c ? x : y? The decision was checked by applying the new syntax to the modules in the standard library and seeing how the resulting code read. In many cases where a conditional expression is used, one value seems to be the 'common case' and one value is an 'exceptional case', used only on rarer occasions when the condition isn't met. The conditional syntax makes this pattern a bit more obvious:
contents = ((doc + '\n') if doc else '')
So I think overall this is a reasonable way of approching it but you can't argue with the simplicity of:
if logging: print data
Upvotes: 24
Reputation: 166319
Since 2.5 you can use equivalent of C’s ”?:” ternary conditional operator and the syntax is:
[on_true] if [expression] else [on_false]
So your example is fine, but you've to simply add else
, like:
print a if b else ''
Upvotes: 13
Reputation: 76236
Python does not have a trailing if
statement.
There are two kinds of if
in Python:
if
statement:
if condition: statement
if condition:
block
if
expression (introduced in Python 2.5)
expression_if_true if condition else expression_if_false
And note, that both print a
and b = a
are statements. Only the a
part is an expression. So if you write
print a if b else 0
it means
print (a if b else 0)
and similarly when you write
x = a if b else 0
it means
x = (a if b else 0)
Now what would it print/assign if there was no else
clause? The print/assignment is still there.
And note, that if you don't want it to be there, you can always write the regular if
statement on a single line, though it's less readable and there is really no reason to avoid the two-line variant.
Upvotes: 1111
Reputation: 5199
Well why don't you simply write:
if b:
print a
else:
print 'b is false'
Upvotes: -2
Reputation: 40755
Inline if-else EXPRESSION must always contain else clause, e.g:
a = 1 if b else 0
If you want to leave your 'a' variable value unchanged - assing old 'a' value (else is still required by syntax demands):
a = 1 if b else a
This piece of code leaves a unchanged when b turns to be False.
Upvotes: 147
Reputation: 765
The 'else' statement is mandatory. You can do stuff like this :
>>> b = True
>>> a = 1 if b else None
>>> a
1
>>> b = False
>>> a = 1 if b else None
>>> a
>>>
EDIT:
Or, depending of your needs, you may try:
>>> if b: print(a)
Upvotes: 36
Reputation:
For your case this works:
a = b or 0
Edit: How does this work?
In the question
b = True
So evaluating
b or 0
results in
True
which is assigned to a
.
If b == False?
, b or 0
would evaluate to the second operand 0
which would be assigned to a
.
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 599450
You always need an else
in an inline if:
a = 1 if b else 0
But an easier way to do it would be a = int(b)
.
Upvotes: 3