@MahNeh As Andras says, everything is a reference in Python.
Since the else clause on a for or while loop is so rare, it's a good idea to comment it when you use it. Especially if there's an else-less if before the loop, or inside the loop.
I've seen code that uses the "loop with else clause" get messed up by well-meaning editors on SO who forgot (or never learned) that loops can have an else clause.
@PM2Ring bc it's C under the hood right ? i just mostly referencing that array1=array2 has the same behaviour than in JS/TS, and I assume var_c = var_d won't stay using the same reference and can be updated independently ?
@MahNeh What's under the hood is irrelevant. Sure, CPython is C under the hood. But there are other options. Thinking about Python in terms of C pointers and stuff can be helpful, but it can occasionally be misleading. IMHO, it's best to just embrace the Python datamodel on its own terms. Don't think about putting objects in boxes. Think about putting nametags on objects.
Language comparison can be illuminating. But you need to know the languages that you're comparing. ;) Trying to learn Python by mentally translating Python stuff into stuff from other languages is a limited strategy.
It's like learning a human language. If you're continually translating everything in the new language to your mother tongue, it's laborious, and it won't lead to native fluency.
I've been coding for almost 50 years. Most of the languages I used before Python require you to declare the types of variables, so I know how to use that stuff. OTOH, coming to Python was very liberating.
PM already pointed you to the names vs variables post, that's most of what you need to know aside from a python tutorial. The official one is fine since you already know other languages.
It took me a few months of immersion into Python to break myself out of the habit of analysing it in terms of C. And then it finally started to make sense. :) I could do things The Python Way, rather than always writing C-like code in Python syntax.
Some use type hints. But some of us prefer to not use them.
I fell in love with Python because it freed me from having to deal with types all the time. And I don't agree that it's a good design strategy to bolt an ad-hoc type system to a duck-type language.
@MahNeh Definitely work through the official Python tutorial. It was written for people who already know how to program (in a C-like language). It's not perfect, but it is excellent. It will give you a very solid foundation.
Numpy arrays are a bit different because they contain machine integers or floats, not Python number objects. So Numpy arrays are very similar to the arrays you already know from other languages. So don't worry about them right now. Focus on Python's built-in datatypes.
Python has several built-in array-like datatypes: tuple, list, str, bytearray, bytes, (and memoryview). There's also array.array in the stdlib, although that's very rarely used. In Python, when people use the word "array", they usually mean a Numpy array. So it's a bit confusing to call lists or tuples arrays.
Just to follow up on that - it's not that people are splitting hairs about the semantics of "list" vs. "array". They are wildly different objects that behave in completely different ways.