# this is a comment
# Python ignores comments,
something = 1 # and you can place them after any line of code
"""If you don't want to write a comments using hashtags,
you can put them in a multi-line comment block.
However, if you put hashtags in strings, they do not
create comments.
"""
# comments serve as notes to the programmers
# you can write whatever you want in comments
# You use a hastag at the beginning of the line to make anything after it a comment
'''
You can also make a multi line comment
With three single quotes at the beginning and end!
'''
select the lines you want to comment
and 'use Ctrl + / to comment all of the selected text'.
To uncomment do the same thing.
OR
put a '#' before each line
eg : #This is a comment
#this is a comment. use comments to remember code. put them in your code.
#it looks like buzy work. but you will be suprised how often you reread your code
# this is the comment you can copy
# single line : add #
"""
The recommended method for commenting multiple lines is using # on each line.
The (“””) method isn’t actually a comment but defines a Text constant
of the text between the (“””).
It isn’t displayed, but exists and could potentially cause unexpected errors.
"""
"""
This is a
multiline comment
"""
'''
single quote
multiline comment
'''
# this is a single line comment
#function documentation comment
def get_message():
"""
function comment example
:return: "Hello World"
"""
return "Hello world"
# This is a single lined comment for Python,
# and can be used at the end of a line of code
"""
For multi-line comments,
use three hashtags! can not go in the end of a line of code.
""" # make sure to close your comment!
# Single Line Comment.
'''
Multiple Line Comment.
There's no Multiple Line Comment in python.
Use string tag to comment.
Three single quote at the start and the end.
'''
"""
This is a
Python multi-line Docstring
which can also be used
to create a python block comment
Just like this one
"""
print ('This section is not a python block comment')