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Home/ Questions/Q 649157
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T21:54:45+00:00 2026-05-13T21:54:45+00:00

In python, you can concatenate boolean values, and it would return an integer. Example:

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In python, you can concatenate boolean values, and it would return an integer. Example:

>>> True
True
>>> True + True
2
>>> True + False
1
>>> True + True + True
3
>>> True + True + False
2
>>> False + False
0

Why? Why does this make sense?

I understand that True is often represented as 1, whereas False is represented as 0, but that still does not explain how adding two values together of the same type returns a completely different type.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T21:54:45+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 9:54 pm

    Because In Python, bool is the subclass/subtype of int.

    >>> issubclass(bool,int)
    True
    

    Update:

    From boolobject.c

    /* Boolean type, a subtype of int */
    
    /* We need to define bool_print to override int_print */
    bool_print
        fputs(self->ob_ival == 0 ? "False" : "True", fp);
    
    /* We define bool_repr to return "False" or "True" */
    bool_repr
        ...
    
    /* We define bool_new to always return either Py_True or Py_False */
        ...
    
    // Arithmetic methods -- only so we can override &, |, ^
    bool_as_number
        bool_and,       /* nb_and */
        bool_xor,       /* nb_xor */
        bool_or,        /* nb_or */
    
    PyBool_Type
        "bool",
        sizeof(PyIntObject),
        (printfunc)bool_print,          /* tp_print */
        (reprfunc)bool_repr,            /* tp_repr */
        &bool_as_number,                /* tp_as_number */
        (reprfunc)bool_repr,            /* tp_str */
        &PyInt_Type,                    /* tp_base */
        bool_new,                       /* tp_new */
    
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