Andrej Mitrovic: > I think "any" is used in Python IIRC, so I'll have to go +1 with Robert here.
any() and all() in Python have a different purpose, the first is true if one or more than the given items is true, and the second is true if they all true: >>> all([1, 2, 4]) True >>> all(["", None, 0]) False >>> all(["", None, 1]) False >>> any(["", None, 1]) True >>> any([1, 2, 4]) True >>> any(["", None, 0]) False Bye, bearophile