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I'm a python newbie and I'm a little bit confused about the difference about b'' and ''.

I think they are both empty but b'' == '' returns False. But why? Can somebody explain this to me in terms of memory?

Are they the same in terms of content in memory and different in terms of type which results in inequality?

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3 Answers 3

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b"" creates a bytes object while "" creates a str object. To quote the documentation:

Bytes literals are always prefixed with 'b' or 'B'; they produce an instance of the bytes type instead of the str type. They may only contain ASCII characters; bytes with a numeric value of 128 or greater must be expressed with escapes.

In Python3, objects of different types (except different numeric types) never compare equal.

BTW, the memory size of the objects differs as well:

>>> from sys import getsizeof 
>>> getsizeof(b"")
33
>>> getsizeof("")
49
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(this is for python3): one of your examples is of the type bytes; the other str. they will never be considered equal.

print(type(b'')) # -> <class 'bytes'>
print(type(''))  # -> <class 'str'>
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In python2 there is basically no difference. In python3 the first one is a string of bytes or a byte litteral, and the second one is a normal string.

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