I recently came across this syntax, I am unaware of the difference.
I would appreciate it if someone could tell me the difference.
The answer is explained here.
To quote:
A class is free to implement comparison any way it chooses, and it can choose to make comparison against None mean something (which actually makes sense; if someone told you to implement the None object from scratch, how else would you get it to compare True against itself?).
Practically-speaking, there is not much difference since custom comparison operators are rare. But you should use is None
as a general rule.
is
is, basically, integer comparison while ==
is not only resolving references but comparing values which may have mismatching types.
class Foo:
def __eq__(self, other):
return True
foo = Foo()
print(foo == None)
# True
print(foo is None)
# False
In this case, they are the same. None
is a singleton object (there only ever exists one None
).
is
checks to see if the object is the same object, while ==
just checks if they are equivalent.
For example:
p = [1]
q = [1]
p is q # False because they are not the same actual object
p == q # True because they are equivalent
But since there is only one None
, they will always be the same, and is
will return True.
p = None
q = None
p is q # True because they are both pointing to the same "None"
x == None
may evaluate to True
even if x
is not None
but an instance of some class with its own custom equality operator.
It depends on what you are comparing to None. Some classes have custom comparison methods that treat == None
differently from is None
.
In particular the output of a == None
does not even have to be boolean !! - a frequent cause of bugs.
For a specific example take a numpy array where the ==
comparison is implemented elementwise:
import numpy as np
a = np.zeros(3) # now a is array([0., 0., 0.])
a == None #compares elementwise, outputs array([False, False, False]), i.e. not boolean!!!
a is None #compares object to object, outputs False
If you use numpy,
if np.zeros(3) == None: pass
will give you an error when numpy does elementwise comparison.
==
andis
in python?is
vs==
, or about the nature of what exactlyNone
is and how the behaviour differs in either context (the latter is why I ended up here). Based on the vagueness and lack of OP responses... I'm surprised this has so many upvotes. I mean... cmon... the question is not even written in the actual question...