Python short circuits the logical operators. for eg:
if False and Condition2:
#condition2 won't even be checked because the first condition is already false.
Is there a way to stop this behavior. I want it to check both the conditions and then perform the and operation(as done in c, c++ etc). It's useful when we are performing some operation along with the condition. e.g.:
if a < p.pop() and b < p.pop():
One way can be checking the conditions before and then comparing the Boolean values. But that would be wastage of memory.
if all([a < p.pop(), b < p.pop()])
This creates a list, which will be evaluated in its entirety, and then uses all
to confirm that both values are truthy. But this is somewhat obscure and I'd rather suggest you write plain, easy to understand code:
a_within_limit = a < p.pop()
b_within_limit = b < p.pop()
if a_within_limit and b_within_limit: