Out of these not None tests.
if val != None:
if not (val is None):
if val is not None:
Which one is preferable, and why?
if val is not None:
# ...
is the Pythonic idiom for testing that a variable is not set to None
. This idiom has particular uses in the case of declaring keyword functions with default parameters. is
tests identity in Python. Because there is one and only one instance of None
present in a running Python script/program, is
is the optimal test for this. As Johnsyweb points out, this is discussed in PEP 8 under "Programming Recommendations".
As for why this is preferred to
if not (val is None):
# ...
this is simply part of the Zen of Python: "Readability counts." Good Python is often close to good pseudocode.
val = ''; print(val is not None)
prints True
, so what part do you find incorrect?
val != None
is not recommended: If val
can be either None
or a more complex thing, like a numpy array, it's not entirely clear whether this intends to be an element-wise comparison (e.g: arr>0
will produce a list of indices at which elements of arr are positive), so if you expect val
to be either an array or None
, then arr is None
is the safest way to test this. In fact, Python 2.7.6 generates a warning that arr != None
will work element-wise in the future. arr is not None
is also nicer to read.
From, Programming Recommendations, PEP 8:
Comparisons to singletons like None should always be done with
is
oris not
, never the equality operators.Also, beware of writing
if x
when you really meanif x is not None
— e.g. when testing whether a variable or argument that defaults to None was set to some other value. The other value might have a type (such as a container) that could be false in a boolean context!
PEP 8 is essential reading for any Python programmer.
The best bet with these types of questions is to see exactly what python does. The dis
module is incredibly informative:
>>> import dis
>>> dis.dis("val != None")
1 0 LOAD_NAME 0 (val)
2 LOAD_CONST 0 (None)
4 COMPARE_OP 3 (!=)
6 RETURN_VALUE
>>> dis.dis("not (val is None)")
1 0 LOAD_NAME 0 (val)
2 LOAD_CONST 0 (None)
4 COMPARE_OP 9 (is not)
6 RETURN_VALUE
>>> dis.dis("val is not None")
1 0 LOAD_NAME 0 (val)
2 LOAD_CONST 0 (None)
4 COMPARE_OP 9 (is not)
6 RETURN_VALUE
Notice that the last two cases reduce to the same sequence of operations, Python reads not (val is None)
and uses the is not
operator. The first uses the !=
operator when comparing with None
.
As pointed out by other answers, using !=
when comparing with None
is a bad idea.
dis doc
(https://docs.python.org/3/library/dis.html), COMPARE_OP
performs the boolean operation corresponding to the tuple dis.cmp_op = ('<', '<=', '==', '!=', '>', '>=', 'in', 'not in', 'is', 'is not', 'exception match', 'BAD')
. So COMPARE_OP 9
performs is not
and COMPARE_OP 3
performs !=
.
Either of the latter two, since val
could potentially be of a type that defines __eq__()
to return true when passed None
.
__eq__()
behavior, and something I hadn't considered. Good answer for catching a corner case.
if val:
?if
will be false if val is 0, "", [], 0.0. etc. as well as if it is None.