Python string of letters is a string of letters, but not with special ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ In python, a string is a string until you add special characters. Date: February 12, 2022 In python, a string is a string until you add special characters. In browsing twitter this morning I came accross this tweet, that showed that you can use is accross two strings if they do not contain special characters. https://twitter.com/bascodes/status/1492147596688871424 I popped open ipython to play with this. I could confirm on 3.9.7, short strings that I typed in worked as expected. ``` waylonwalker ↪main v3.9.7 ipython ❯ a = "asdf" waylonwalker ↪main v3.9.7 ipython ❯ b = "asdf" waylonwalker ↪main v3.9.7 ipython ❯ a is b True ``` Using the upper() method on these strings does break down. ``` waylonwalker ↪main v3.9.7 ipython ❯ a.upper() is b.upper() False waylonwalker ↪main v3.9.7 ipython ❯ a = "ASDF" waylonwalker ↪main v3.9.7 ipython ❯ b = "ASDF" waylonwalker ↪main v3.9.7 ipython ❯ a is b True ``` If You can also see this in the id of the objects as well, which is the memmory address in CPython. ``` waylonwalker ↪main v3.9.7 ipython ❯ id(a) 140717359289568 waylonwalker ↪main v3.9.7 ipython ❯ id(b) 140717359289568 waylonwalker ↪main v3.9.7 ipython ❯ id(a.upper()) 140717359581824 waylonwalker ↪main v3.9.7 ipython ❯ id(b.upper()) 140717360337824 ``` Finally just as the post shows if you add a special character in there it also breaks. ``` waylonwalker ↪main v3.9.7 ipython ❯ a = "ASDF!" waylonwalker ↪main v3.9.7 ipython ❯ b = "ASDF!" waylonwalker ↪main v3.9.7 ipython ❯ a is b False ``` What should you do ────────────────── First and foremost, these are the exact pitfalls that flake8 guards you against. So the very first things you should take away here is that there is a lot of wisdom and value in flake8. Second, the is comparison should be used for things that you want to compare to exact memmory addresses. These include booleans and None. Don’t use is accross two assigned variables.