It helps to use correct terminology. It's not a command, it's an operator. Also the programming is object oriented.
I can't decipher the "It is a classic case of where the theory overrides the non requirement at the code level." which is maybe why I don't see what it is Python is supposed to have right.
Jenda
1984 was supposed to be a warning,
not a manual!
In reply to Re: Python 'is' command
by Jenda
in thread Python 'is' command
by betmatt
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