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For example, if passed the following:

a = []

How do I check to see if a is empty?

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8 Answers

up vote 277 down vote accepted
if not a:
  print "List is empty"

Using the implicit booleanness of the empty list is quite pythonic.

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28  
up'd for 'pythonic' – Frep D-Oronge Sep 10 '08 at 8:12
23  
up'd for 'implicit booleanness' – Jeffrey Greenham Mar 25 '11 at 21:34
5  
Playing devil's advocate. I don't understand why this idiom is considered pythonic. 'Explicit is better then implicit', correct? This check doesn't seem very explicit about what is is checking. – James McMahon Nov 22 '11 at 6:14
+1 to James McMahon for calling this out. – hiwaylon Dec 7 '11 at 17:48
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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:

if not seq:
if seq:

No:

if len(seq)
if not len(seq)
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9  
up'd for linking the style guide as an authoritative reference – Carl Meyer Sep 10 '08 at 13:43
8  
Note that if seq is None you will get the same response as if seq is an empty list; if logic needs to be different in this case you need to explicitly check for None separately. – Patrick Johnmeyer Sep 10 '08 at 15:12
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An empty list is itself considered false in true value testing (see python documentation):

a = []
if a:
     print "not empty"

@Daren Thomas

EDIT: Another point against testing the empty list as False: What about polymorphism? You shouldn't depend on a list being a list. It should just quack like a duck - how are you going to get your duckCollection to quack ''False'' when it has no elements?

Your duckCollection should implement __nonzero__ or __len__ so the if a: will work without problems.

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You can use backticks to format code blocks inside regular text. Do that instead of making it look worse to avoid the other formatting StackOverflow has. – Chris Lutz Sep 30 '09 at 3:35
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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:

if not a:
    print "The list is empty or null"
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1  
There is no null list in Python, at most a name bound to a None value – Vinko Vrsalovic Sep 10 '08 at 9:08
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I prefer the following:

if a == []:
   print "The list is empty."

Readable and you don't have to worry about calling a function like len() to iterate through the variable. Although I'm not entirely sure what the BigO notation of something like this is... but Python's so blazingly fast I doubt it'd matter unless a was gigantic.

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Yes, but it does break polymorphism... – Daren Thomas Sep 10 '08 at 6:56
1  
Big-O-notation is completely irrelevant here. The input is an empty list, meaning that the n in O(n) equals zero. – Konrad Rudolph Sep 10 '08 at 10:44
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Big O notation aside, this is going to be slower, as you instantiate an extra empty list unnecessarily. – Carl Meyer Sep 10 '08 at 13:42
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I prefer it explicitly:

if len(li) == 0:
    print 'the list is empty'

This way it's 100% clear that li is a sequence (list) and we want to test its size. My problem with if not li: ... is that it gives the false impression that li is a boolean variable.

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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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