Wondering if if not foo is None
is the same as if foo
? Using Python 2.7 and foo
is a string.
4 Answers
For empty strings both are different:
foo = ''
if foo:
print 'if foo is True'
will not print anything because it is empty and therefore considered False
but:
if foo is not None:
print 'if not foo is None is True'
will print because foo
is not None!
I Changed it according to PEP8. if foo is not None
is equivalent to your if not foo is None
but more readable and therefore recommended by PEP8.
A bit more about the general principles in Python:
if a is None:
pass
The if
will only be True
if a = None
was explicitly set.
On the other hand:
if a:
pass
has several ways of evaluating when it is True
:
Python tries to call
a.__bool__
and if this is implemented then the returned value is used.- So
None
,False
,0.0
,0
will evaluate toFalse
because their__bool__
method returnsFalse
.
- So
If
a.__bool__
is not implemented then it checks whata.__len__.__bool__
returns.''
,[]
,set()
,dict()
, etc. will evaluate toFalse
because their__len__
method returns0
. Which isFalse
becausebool(0)
isFalse
.
If even
a.__len__
is not implemented then if just returnsTrue
.- so every other objects/function/whatever is just
True
.
- so every other objects/function/whatever is just
See also: truth-value-testing in thy python documentation.
-
1
-
Thanks MSeifert, in Python any variable (could be string object and any other types of objects) should be point to something, correct? Then how could
if X is not None
be False?– Lin MaMar 12, 2016 at 3:35 -
MSeifert, nice answer. But how do we know for any class, if
__bool__
or__len__
is defined?– Lin MaMar 12, 2016 at 4:32 -
1
help(a)
shows you all information about the instance or just tryprint a.__bool__()
orprint a.__len__()
. (or the shortcutsbool(a)
,len(a)
) and see what raises an Error (then it's not implemented) or if it prints something (then it's implemented)– MSeifertMar 12, 2016 at 4:34 -
1Ah forgot the obvious case: if none of those two methods is defined
bool(a)
just returnsTrue
regardless.– MSeifertMar 12, 2016 at 4:53
No, not the same when foo is an empty string.
In [1]: foo = ''
In [2]: if foo:
...: print 1
...:
In [3]: if foo is None:
...: print 2
...:
In [4]: if not foo is None:
...: print 3
...:
3
-
Thanks tianwei, vote up. I often see people write
if not X
(X could be any types of object), if in Python a variable have to point to some object, how couldif not X
be False? Thanks.– Lin MaMar 12, 2016 at 3:38 -
1@LinMa, when X is neither None nor empty(0,[], {}, () ,or ''),
if not X
would be False.– tianweiMar 12, 2016 at 15:11
Operator is
compares ids (you can check the id of something with id(something)
). As there is only one instance of None
, any expression in the form something is None
will be False
except for None is None
or if something == None
. Operator not
has less precedence than comparisons (and is
is a comparison operator) so the result for not string is None
which is the same as not (string is None)
is always True
.
Nevertheless a string object is considered True
if it is not the empty string and False
if it is the empty string.
So, one of the expressions is always True
and the other can vary so no, they are not equivalent.
-
Thanks Salva, vote up. I often see people write
if not X
(X could be any types of object), if in Python a variable have to point to some object, how couldif not X
be False? Thanks.– Lin MaMar 12, 2016 at 3:38 -
1And Salva, for
not str is None
,not
is operate onstr
, ornot
is operated onstr is None
? Thanks.– Lin MaMar 12, 2016 at 4:22 -
1
if not X
can beFalse
because in the context where a boolean is expected such a if-test,X
is converted into a boolean implicitly. The rules governing such conversions are summarized in the Python online reference.– SalvaMar 12, 2016 at 9:55 -
1@LinMa, answering to your second question I realized a failure in the answer reasoning.
not
has less precedence than comparisons sonot str is None
is the same asnot (str is None)
. I edit and fix the answer.– SalvaMar 12, 2016 at 10:15
No. Try this code
foo=''
if foo:
print (1)
else:
print (2)
if not foo is None:
print (3)
else:
print (4)
it will print
2
3
-
Thanks Sci, vote up. In Python any variable (could be string object and any other types of objects) should be point to something, correct? Then how could
if X is not None
be False?– Lin MaMar 12, 2016 at 3:35
if foo is not None
only checks if foo is really not the singletonNone
whileif foo
checksif bool(foo)
orif foo.__nonzero__()
which are completly different things.len
of a string is more than 0bool(that_string)
returnsTrue
. If thelen
of the string is 0 then it returnsFalse
. I think for the builtins like str there is no__nonzero__
-method, but I'm not sure.__bool__
and not__nonzero__
.False
orNone
evaluates toTrue
when used asif variable
orif bool(variable)