549

I recently came across this syntax, I am unaware of the difference.

I would appreciate it if someone could tell me the difference.

4

5 Answers 5

495

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.

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  • 135
    Also, is None is a bit (~50%) faster than == None :)
    – Nas Banov
    Jul 16, 2010 at 1:08
  • 46
    @myusuf3: >>> timeit.Timer('None is None').timeit() | 0.225 | >>> timeit.Timer('None == None').timeit() | 0.328
    – Nas Banov
    Jan 25, 2012 at 21:44
  • 18
    @myusuf3 You don't really need a proof for that. is is, basically, integer comparison while == is not only resolving references but comparing values which may have mismatching types.
    – Pijusn
    Aug 9, 2013 at 15:40
  • 6
    One on favour of "is". When a variable can be either None or something that has no meaningful comparison with None. For example, a variable can be a numpy.array or None (my particular case).
    – Jblasco
    Oct 14, 2014 at 10:38
  • 6
    I would like to add to what @TimLudwinski is saying: first, if someone chose to override the equality operator to make None a special case, why would we want to tell them otherwise? Second, "There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it." And the obvious way to check if something is equal to something is, well, the equality operator.
    – Yuval
    Dec 14, 2015 at 16:45
232
class Foo:
    def __eq__(self, other):
        return True
foo = Foo()

print(foo == None)
# True

print(foo is None)
# False
1
69

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"
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58

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
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  • 9
    I think this is a better answer than the current accepted answer, as it has easy to understand examples.
    – Olsgaard
    Aug 6, 2020 at 7:56
6

If you use numpy,

if np.zeros(3) == None: pass

will give you an error when numpy does elementwise comparison.

1
  • Also: np.array(None) is None : False.
    – Coljac
    Nov 20, 2023 at 1:24

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