428

How would you say does not equal?

Like

if hi == hi:
    print "hi"
elif hi (does not equal) bye:
    print "no hi"

Is there something equivalent to == that means "not equal"?

Hari
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Aj Entity
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    Are you asking about `else`, `!=` (optionally `<>`) or `is not`? – Tadeck Jun 16 '12 at 03:25
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    Attention that <> doesn't work any more in python 3, so use != – Antonello Mar 07 '16 at 10:38
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    from python documentation: `Python3 : The operators , ==, >=, <=, and != compare the values of two objects.` https://docs.python.org/3/reference/expressions.html#value-comparisons – hamed Nov 07 '16 at 13:00
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    from python documentation: `python2: ` https://docs.python.org/2/reference/expressions.html#not-in – hamed Nov 07 '16 at 13:05

10 Answers10

670

Use !=. See comparison operators. For comparing object identities, you can use the keyword is and its negation is not.

e.g.

1 == 1 #  -> True
1 != 1 #  -> False
[] is [] #-> False (distinct objects)
a = b = []; a is b # -> True (same object)
dimo414
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tskuzzy
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69

Not equal != (vs equal ==)

Are you asking about something like this?

answer = 'hi'

if answer == 'hi':     # equal
   print "hi"
elif answer != 'hi':   # not equal
   print "no hi"

This Python - Basic Operators chart might be helpful.

Levon
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30

There's the != (not equal) operator that returns True when two values differ, though be careful with the types because "1" != 1. This will always return True and "1" == 1 will always return False, since the types differ. Python is dynamically, but strongly typed, and other statically typed languages would complain about comparing different types.

There's also the else clause:

# This will always print either "hi" or "no hi" unless something unforeseen happens.
if hi == "hi":     # The variable hi is being compared to the string "hi", strings are immutable in Python, so you could use the 'is' operator.
    print "hi"     # If indeed it is the string "hi" then print "hi"
else:              # hi and "hi" are not the same
    print "no hi"

The is operator is the object identity operator used to check if two objects in fact are the same:

a = [1, 2]
b = [1, 2]
print a == b # This will print True since they have the same values
print a is b # This will print False since they are different objects.
Peter Mortensen
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Samy Vilar
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13

You can use both != or <>.

However, note that != is preferred where <> is deprecated.

Malek B.
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7

Seeing as everyone else has already listed most of the other ways to say not equal I will just add:

if not (1) == (1): # This will eval true then false
    # (ie: 1 == 1 is true but the opposite(not) is false)
    print "the world is ending" # This will only run on a if true
elif (1+1) != (2): #second if
    print "the world is ending"
    # This will only run if the first if is false and the second if is true
else: # this will only run if the if both if's are false
    print "you are good for another day"

in this case it is simple switching the check of positive == (true) to negative and vise versa...

gabeio
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1

You can use "is not" for "not equal" or "!=". Please see the example below:

a = 2
if a == 2:
   print("true")
else:
   print("false")

The above code will print "true" as a = 2 assigned before the "if" condition. Now please see the code below for "not equal"

a = 2
if a is not 3:
   print("not equal")
else:
   print("equal")

The above code will print "not equal" as a = 2 as assigned earlier.

Amir Md Amiruzzaman
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0

There are two operators in Python for the "not equal" condition -

a.) != If values of the two operands are not equal, then the condition becomes true. (a != b) is true.

b.) <> If values of the two operands are not equal, then the condition becomes true. (a <> b) is true. This is similar to the != operator.

Peter Mortensen
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user128364
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0

You can use != operator to check for inequality. Moreover in python 2 there was <> operator which used to do the same thing but it has been deprecated in python 3

Hadi Mir
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-3

Use != or <>. Both stands for not equal.

The comparison operators <> and != are alternate spellings of the same operator. != is the preferred spelling; <> is obsolescent. [Reference: Python language reference]

Ehsan
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  • @S.A. I'm confused, Ehsan posted this nearly a *year* before user128364? – ljden Mar 09 '22 at 05:13
  • Mhh looking at it now that seems right @Ijden. Maybe I misread a date back then (>4 years ago). I'll delete my comment. Thanks for making me aware and sorry for any trouble this might have caused. – S.A. Mar 09 '22 at 21:14
-5

You can simply do:

if hi == hi:
    print "hi"
elif hi != bye:
     print "no hi"
cgastald
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    What value would you assign to the variables `hi` and `bye`? Whatever it would be, the elif clause would never be reached. Lastly, this example does not clearly provide an answer to the question. – S.A. Mar 01 '18 at 17:44