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Home/ Questions/Q 8140403
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 6, 20262026-06-06T12:09:15+00:00 2026-06-06T12:09:15+00:00

If I have two strings that are identical in value, is it guaranteed that

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If I have two strings that are identical in value, is it guaranteed that hash(s1) == hash(s2) without using hashlib? Also, what is the upper bound on the number of digits in the hash?
Is there an alternative to hash that is invertable? I understand hash functions are not meant to be used like this. But a 1-1 mapping from strings to short hexadecimal strings that can be inverted and is guaranteed to be different for each string?

Will this work:

import zlib
# compress
zlib.compress("foo")
zlib.decompress(zlib.compress("foo")) == "foo"  # always true?

Thanks.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-06T12:09:16+00:00Added an answer on June 6, 2026 at 12:09 pm

    YES.

    >>>help(hash)
        Help on built-in function hash in module builtins:
    
        hash(...)
            hash(object) -> integer
    
            Return a hash value for the object.  Two objects with the same value have
            the same hash value.  The reverse is not necessarily true, but likely.
    
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