closes bpo-28955: Clarified comparisons between NaN and number in reference documentation (GH-5982)
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Peterson <benjamin@python.org>
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@ -1336,12 +1336,11 @@ built-in types.
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involved, they compare mathematically (algorithmically) correct without loss
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of precision.
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The not-a-number values :const:`float('NaN')` and :const:`Decimal('NaN')`
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are special. They are identical to themselves (``x is x`` is true) but
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are not equal to themselves (``x == x`` is false). Additionally,
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comparing any number to a not-a-number value
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will return ``False``. For example, both ``3 < float('NaN')`` and
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``float('NaN') < 3`` will return ``False``.
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The not-a-number values ``float('NaN')`` and ``decimal.Decimal('NaN')`` are
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special. Any ordered comparison of a number to a not-a-number value is false.
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A counter-intuitive implication is that not-a-number values are not equal to
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themselves. For example, if ``x = float('NaN')``, ``3 < x``, ``x < 3``, ``x
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== x``, ``x != x`` are all false. This behavior is compliant with IEEE 754.
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* Binary sequences (instances of :class:`bytes` or :class:`bytearray`) can be
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compared within and across their types. They compare lexicographically using
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