I am looking at the behavior of the all
function in Python and it's behavior struck me as not very intuitive when it comes to empty lists. I would assume there is a good rationale and deliberation that went into the decision for such a choice and probably there is a solid mathematical explanation in some form. I am curious to know what is the foundation for such behaviors where comparisons with an empty set results in true
results.
I am referring to the following python code
all(a==2 for a in my_list)
I expect the above code to return True if all the elements in my_list are 2. but when I make my_list empty and run it as
my_list = []
all(a==2 for a in my_list)
it returns True as well. I am confused with this behaviour. Is it not supposed to return False as there is no element in my_list with value 2?