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Home/ Questions/Q 7680961
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 31, 20262026-05-31T18:14:05+00:00 2026-05-31T18:14:05+00:00

Is there a substantial difference in Python 3.x between: for each_line in data_file: if

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Is there a substantial difference in Python 3.x between:

for each_line in data_file:
    if each_line.find(":") != -1:
        #placeholder for code
        #more placeholder

and

for each_line in data:
    if not each_line.find(":") == -1:
        #placeholder for code
        #more placeholder

My question isn’t particular to the above usage, but is more general or essential – is this syntactical difference working in a different way, even though the result is the same? Is there a logical difference? Are there tasks where one is more appropriate or is this solely a stylistic difference? If this is merely stylistic, which one is considered cleaner by Python programmers?

Also, is the above an opposite instance of asking what the difference is between is and ==? Is the former, like the latter, a difference of object identity and object value equality? What I mean is, in my above example, is the is in using not implicit?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-31T18:14:06+00:00Added an answer on May 31, 2026 at 6:14 pm

    As I understand it,
    functionally they are not entirely the same; if you are comparing against a class, the class could have a member function, __ne__ which is called when using the comparison operator !=, as opposed to __eq__ which is called when using the comparison ==

    So, in this instance,
    not (a == b) would call __eq__ on a, with b as the argument, then not the result
    (a != b) would call __ne__ on a, with b as the argument.

    I would use the first method (using !=) for comparison

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