In ruby I can do this:
1.9.3-p448 :001 > a = 1 || 2
=> 1
1.9.3-p448 :004 > a = nil || 2
=> 2
1.9.3-p448 :005 > a = 1 || nil
=> 1
Is there a similar one-liner in Python?
Just use the or
operator. From the linked page:
x or y: if x is false, then y, else x
Example:
In [1]: 1 or 2
Out[1]: 1
In [2]: None or 2
Out[2]: 2
In [3]: 1 or None
Out[3]: 1
False or 2 == 2
, 0 or 2 == 2
, and [] or [2] == [2]
. Make sure you want this behaviour
||
, and 0 || 2
gives 0 in Ruby (compared with 0 | 2
, which gives 2), so we'd need to check on expectations in those cases.
Python's or
operator is pretty much the equivalent of Ruby's ||
-- and None
can be used in Python somewhat similarly to how nil
is in Ruby.
So, for example,
a = None or 2
would set a
to 2
.
You can also use a richer "ternary" operator, something if condition else somethingelse
-- a or b
is the same as a if a else b
-- but clearly or
is more concise and readable when what you want to do is exactly the semantics it supports.
nil
, not null
. But I agree with the rest of the answer.
Feb 3, 2015 at 21:09
Don't forget about modern if-else syntax:
x = a if a is not None else 999
(or whatever condition you need). This let you test for non-None and is not prone to empty list and similar problems.
General syntax is
ValueToBeUsedIfConditionIsTrue if Condition else ValueToBeUsedIfConditionIsFalse