Conditionals
Programs generally run from the "top down". A computer will read line one, execute line one, and then go to line two, for example. It is common to include conditional statements to decide if a program should "do something else" if a specific condition is true or false.
A conditional statement evaluates an expression and executes instructions depending on the outcome of the evaluation. Conditionals depend on operators to evaluate if an expression is true or false. A condition and selection are not the same thing. A condition asks a question. A selection processes the answer.
With gratitude to and permission from Stephen Hughes (Coe College) and Philip East (University of Northern Iowa)[2], The list below is an example of types of conditional questions. You should start thinking about conditions in plain english before you start thinking about operators.
- Match
- Threshold
- Range
- One-of
- Not-match
- Not one of
- All of
- Some of
- Eligible
Conditional operators[edit]
Conditional code sample[edit]
# this file helps us to understand conditionals in Python.
# what do you think the output will be when you execute these instructions?
a = 5
b = "bar"
if a == 5:
print("Yes, the variable a has been assigned to the value 5.")
else:
print("No, the variable a has not been assigned to the value 5.")
# what do you think the output will be when you execute these instructions?
a = 5
b = "bar"
if b == "foo":
print("yes, the variable b has been assigned the value foo")
else:
print("no, the variable b has been assigned to some other value than foo.")
Multiple conditionals code sample[edit]
# this file helps us to understand multiple conditionals in Python.
# what do you think the output will be when you execute these instructions?
a = 5
b = "bar"
if (a == 5 and b == "bar"):
print("both conditions are true.")
else:
print("one or both of the conditions are false")
# what do you think the output will be when you execute these instructions?
a = 5
b = "bar"
if (a == 5 or b == "bar"):
print("both conditions are true.")
else:
print("one or both of the conditions are false")
Some videos[edit]