We've discovered that if you manually type out a condition that evaluates to False in the new REPL, False is printed as the result, as expected...
>>> (3, 13, 0, "final") < (3, 13, 0, "beta")
False
...but that if you copy and paste this condition into the REPL, nothing is printed (implying that the condition evaluates to None:
>>> (3, 13, 0, "final") < (3, 13, 0, "beta")
>>>
Thanks @Eclips4 for realising that the difference in behaviour here was due to copying-and-pasting the condition rather than typing it out!
Originally posted by @AlexWaygood in #111201 (comment)
Linked PRs
We've discovered that if you manually type out a condition that evaluates to
Falsein the new REPL,Falseis printed as the result, as expected......but that if you copy and paste this condition into the REPL, nothing is printed (implying that the condition evaluates to
None:Thanks @Eclips4 for realising that the difference in behaviour here was due to copying-and-pasting the condition rather than typing it out!
Originally posted by @AlexWaygood in #111201 (comment)
Linked PRs