For example, if passed the following:
a = []
How do I check to see if a is empty?
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For example, if passed the following:
How do I check to see if
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Using the implicit booleanness of the empty list is quite pythonic. | |||||||||||||||
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The pythonic way to do it is from the style guide: For sequences, (strings, lists, tuples), use the fact that empty sequences are false. Yes:
No:
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An empty list is itself considered false in true value testing (see python documentation):
@Daren Thomas
Your duckCollection should implement | ||||
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len() is an O(1) operation for Python lists, strings, dicts, and sets. Python internally keeps track of the number of elements in these containers. JavaScript has a similar notion of truthy/falsy. | |||
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I have seen the below as preferred, as it will catch the null list as well:
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I prefer the following:
Readable and you don't have to worry about calling a function like | |||||||||||
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I prefer it explicitly:
This way it's 100% clear that | |||
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It's silly to compare if a==[] because as mentioned, it breaks polymorphism, worse, extra object creation, a sin, even if it's very fast. len IS the preferred way, because it's standard and any inherited class should support it. | |||
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