Making decisions
Real programs constantly choose between actions: log the user in or show an error, charge full price or apply a discount. The if statement is how Python expresses that choice. The condition is evaluated and if it is true the block runs; otherwise the else block (if present) runs instead.
score = 72
if score >= 90:
print("A")
elif score >= 60:
print("Pass")
else:
print("Fail")else if and switch
When you have more than two branches, else if chains keep the code linear and easy to read. For matching a single value against many constants, some languages offer a switch or match statement that is cleaner than a long chain.
Truthy and falsy
Python treats certain values as automatically "true" or "false" inside a condition. Zero, empty strings and the null value are usually falsy, while everything else is truthy. Learning these rules avoids subtle bugs.