The if statement is used to implement decisions and branching in a program. One or more instructions are only executed if a condition matches:
name = 'Emily'
if name == 'Emily':
studies = 'Physics'
studies'Physics'
There must be an if block, zero or more elif's and an optional else block:
if name == 'Emily':
studies = 'Physics'
elif name == 'Maria':
studies = 'Computer Science'
elif name == 'Sarah':
studies = 'Archaeology'
else:
studies = '-- not registered yet --'Below is an example that demonstrates the Python syntax for an if-else control statement. For a value assigned to a variable x, the program prints a message and modifies x; the message and the modification of x depend on the initial value of x:
x = -10.0 # Initial x value
if x > 0.0:
print('Initial x is greater than zero')
x -= 20.0
elif x < 0.0:
print('Initial x is less than zero')
x += 21.0
else:
print('Initial x is not less than zero and not greater than zero, therefore it must be zero')
x *= 2.5
# Print new x value
print("New x value:", x)Initial x is less than zero
New x value: 11.0
After an if statement, all indented commands are treated as a code block, and are executed in the context of the condition.
The next unindented command is executed in any case.
An if expression may contain comparison operators like:
a =1
b =2 a == b
False
a != bTrue
a < bTrue
a > bFalse
a <= bTrue
a >= bFalse
On lists and strings you can also use:
b = [1,3]
c = 2
d = 1
a in bTrue
Multiple expressions can be combined with boolean logic (and, or, not):
a or b1
a and b[1, 3]
not aFalse
(a or b) and not (c or d)False
Each variable can be interpreted as a boolean (True/False) value. All values are treated as True, except for:
FalseFalse
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