Code Explanation:
๐น Line 1: Create the First Tuple
(1, 2)
Python creates the tuple:
(1, 2)
๐น Line 2: Create an Empty Tuple
()
This is an empty tuple.
Since it has no elements, adding it to another tuple doesn't change the values.
๐น Line 3: Perform Tuple Concatenation
(1,2) + ()
Python concatenates the tuples.
Result:
(1,2)
From a value perspective, nothing changes because the second tuple is empty.
๐น Line 4: Evaluate the is Operator
(1,2) + () is (1,2)
The is operator checks:
"Are both operands the exact same object in memory?"
It does not compare values.
Think of it like:
Same memory location?
instead of:
Same contents?
๐น Why Does CPython Print True?
In CPython, there is an optimization.
When Python sees:
(1,2) + ()
it realizes:
"Adding an empty tuple doesn't change anything."
So instead of creating a brand-new tuple, CPython often reuses the existing tuple object.
Memory (CPython optimization):
┌──────────────┐
Left ───►│ (1, 2) │
└──────────────┘
▲
│
Right ──────────┘
Both expressions point to the same tuple object.
Therefore:
is
returns:
True
๐น Line 5: Print the Result
print(True)
Output:
True

