comment out multiple lines in python code example

Example 1: multiline comment python

# While Python doesn't support multi-line comments, it can ignore anything
'''
inside a multi-line string!
Just wrap the comment in the three single quote marks,
And
you're
good
to
go!
'''

Example 2: python comment multiple lines

#There is no way to comment multiple lines in Python.
#You just keep using "#" symbol to comment each line out.

'''
Technically you could also use triple single quotation
marks like so, but this formatting does not count
as "true" source code comments that are removed by
a Python parser.
'''

Example 3: big comments python

# One line Comment
myvar = 5 # Can also start after any chunk of code

"""
Big multiple lines comment
So many lines
WoW
"""

Example 4: multiline comment in python

# Python is a language that doesn't support multiline comments
# In languages like JS, single line comments have // in the beginning
# and multiline comments have /* in the beginning
# and */ in the end
# the pound symbol in front of these five lines is the python equivalent of //
print("But there is a workaround!!!")
"""
In python, multiline string is written with 3 double or single quotes, 
and the characters in between are treated as an entire string
but, if this string isn't assigned to a variable, python doesnt give any error
It instead ignores the string, similar to the behaviour it would have 
towards a comment. 
BUT!!!!!
If this is string is put just after defining a function, it is treated as a 
docstring, or the documentation string of that function. So, it does have a 
meaning and is not exactly ignored by Python
"""
def someFUnc():
  """
  Python will treat this as a docstring
  """
  pass

print(someFUnc.__doc__)

# OUTPUT:
#   Python will treat this as a docstring