On Wed, May 23, 2018 at 3:51 AM, bartc <b...@freeuk.com> wrote:
> On 22/05/2018 15:25, Chris Angelico wrote:
>>
>> On Tue, May 22, 2018 at 8:25 PM, bartc <b...@freeuk.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> Note that Python tuples don't always need a start symbol:
>>>
>>>     a = 10,20,30
>>>
>>> assigns a tuple to a.
>>
>>
>> The tuple has nothing to do with the parentheses, except for the
>> special case of the empty tuple. It's the comma.
>
>
> No? Take these:
>
>  a = (10,20,30)
>  a = [10,20,30]
>  a = {10,20,30}
>
> If you print type(a) after each, only one of them is a tuple - the one with
> the round brackets.

And this isn't a tuple either:

import os, sys, math

If you've actually read the other emails in this thread, you'll see
that this has already been said.

ChrisA
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