No, it's not that simple.
There are times when '
se' is a reflexive (pronominal) pronoun. There are also passive constructs, and impersonal or accidental usages, to consider.
If those usages can be ruled out, that leaves the possibility of seeing '
se' followed by another pronoun. If both pronouns are third-person pronouns, then you have the condition you may have asked about in the first place.
User
wrholt once posted the following.
Quote:
If there are two or three object pronouns accompanying the verb, the relative order of the pronouns is fixed:
1. 'se' (third person reflexive/pronominal object, or substitute for third-person indirect object = le or les when a third-person direct object is necessary)
2. 'te' or 'os' (second person direct, indirect, or reflexive/promominal object)
3. 'me' or 'nos' (first person direct, indirect, or reflexive/pronominal object)
4. 'le', 'les', 'lo', 'la', 'los' or 'las' (third-person indirect object [only le or les], and third-person direct object [only lo, la, los or las])
Any one pronoun may appear only once in each pronoun group. For each position, at most 1 pronoun from the choices for that position may appear.
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You can go to the authority on the matter
here (la acepción 4, en particular).
Since your question deals with only the third-person pronouns, we can count on seeing '
se' listed first (rule number 1). It replaces the
indirect object pronoun. The remaining
direct object pronoun is covered by rule number 4.