No, none is faster. That's a plain lie. There is no advantage of using the second version. Only making readability worse.
This all came from C, where you could erroneously write
if(x = 3)
instead of
if( x == 3)
Some people thought that it'd be best to write the constant first, in which case if you wrote =instead of ==, you'd get a compiler error. So some sources recommended writing
if(3 == x)
Some people didn't know why this was necessary and carried on and generalized this idea to constructs and languages where it makes absolutely no sense. IMO it didn't make a lot of sense in the original C context either, but that's a matter of personal taste.