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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T15:20:39+00:00 2026-05-10T15:20:39+00:00

I’ve seen several examples of code like this: if not someobj: #do something But

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I’ve seen several examples of code like this:

if not someobj:     #do something 

But I’m wondering why not doing:

if someobj == None:     #do something 

Is there any difference? Does one have an advantage over the other?

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  1. 2026-05-10T15:20:39+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 3:20 pm

    In the first test, Python try to convert the object to a bool value if it is not already one. Roughly, we are asking the object : are you meaningful or not ? This is done using the following algorithm :

    1. If the object has a __nonzero__ special method (as do numeric built-ins, int and float), it calls this method. It must either return a bool value which is then directly used, or an int value that is considered False if equal to zero.

    2. Otherwise, if the object has a __len__ special method (as do container built-ins, list, dict, set, tuple, …), it calls this method, considering a container False if it is empty (length is zero).

    3. Otherwise, the object is considered True unless it is None in which case, it is considered False.

    In the second test, the object is compared for equality to None. Here, we are asking the object, ‘Are you equal to this other value?’ This is done using the following algorithm :

    1. If the object has a __eq__ method, it is called, and the return value is then converted to a boolvalue and used to determine the outcome of the if.

    2. Otherwise, if the object has a __cmp__ method, it is called. This function must return an int indicating the order of the two object (-1 if self < other, 0 if self == other, +1 if self > other).

    3. Otherwise, the object are compared for identity (ie. they are reference to the same object, as can be tested by the is operator).

    There is another test possible using the is operator. We would be asking the object, ‘Are you this particular object?’

    Generally, I would recommend to use the first test with non-numerical values, to use the test for equality when you want to compare objects of the same nature (two strings, two numbers, …) and to check for identity only when using sentinel values (None meaning not initialized for a member field for exemple, or when using the getattr or the __getitem__ methods).

    To summarize, we have :

    >>> class A(object): ...    def __repr__(self): ...        return 'A()' ...    def __nonzero__(self): ...        return False  >>> class B(object): ...    def __repr__(self): ...        return 'B()' ...    def __len__(self): ...        return 0  >>> class C(object): ...    def __repr__(self): ...        return 'C()' ...    def __cmp__(self, other): ...        return 0  >>> class D(object): ...    def __repr__(self): ...        return 'D()' ...    def __eq__(self, other): ...        return True  >>> for obj in ['', (), [], {}, 0, 0., A(), B(), C(), D(), None]: ...     print '%4s: bool(obj) -> %5s, obj == None -> %5s, obj is None -> %5s' % \ ...         (repr(obj), bool(obj), obj == None, obj is None)   '': bool(obj) -> False, obj == None -> False, obj is None -> False   (): bool(obj) -> False, obj == None -> False, obj is None -> False   []: bool(obj) -> False, obj == None -> False, obj is None -> False   {}: bool(obj) -> False, obj == None -> False, obj is None -> False    0: bool(obj) -> False, obj == None -> False, obj is None -> False  0.0: bool(obj) -> False, obj == None -> False, obj is None -> False  A(): bool(obj) -> False, obj == None -> False, obj is None -> False  B(): bool(obj) -> False, obj == None -> False, obj is None -> False  C(): bool(obj) ->  True, obj == None ->  True, obj is None -> False  D(): bool(obj) ->  True, obj == None ->  True, obj is None -> False None: bool(obj) -> False, obj == None ->  True, obj is None ->  True 
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