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Leer Basic Arithmetic and Operator Precedence | Section
Working with Numbers in Python: Integers, Floats, and Type Conversion - 1769704232138

Basic Arithmetic and Operator Precedence

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You'll use arithmetic operators constantly in Python. Consider the most common ones and how precedence determines evaluation order.

Main Operations

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a = 10 b = 3 print(a + b) # Addition print(a - b) # Subtraction print(a * b) # Multiplication print(a / b) # Division print(a ** b) # Exponentiation

Operator Precedence

When multiple operators appear, Python evaluates them in this order (highest → lowest among arithmetic):

  1. **;
  2. Unary + and - (sign);
  3. *, /;
  4. +, -.

Parentheses always win and make intent explicit. Exponentiation ** is right-associative.

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print(2 + 3 * 4) # 14 (multiplication before addition) print((2 + 3) * 4) # 20 (parentheses change the order) # Exponentiation binds tighter than unary minus print(-3 ** 2) # -9 (equivalent to -(3 ** 2)) print((-3) ** 2) # 9 # Right-associative exponentiation print(2 ** 3 ** 2) # 512 (2 ** (3 ** 2))
Note
Note
  • Prefer parentheses in anything nontrivial, readability > cleverness.
  • Remember / always yields a float (even if divisible).

1. What value will this code output?

2. Which expression evaluates to 64?

3. What value will this code output?

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What value will this code output?

Selecteer het correcte antwoord

question mark

Which expression evaluates to 64?

Selecteer het correcte antwoord

question mark

What value will this code output?

Selecteer het correcte antwoord

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