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Groups > comp.lang.python > #15751
| From | Alan Meyer <ameyer2@yahoo.com> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | comp.lang.python |
| Subject | Re: suppressing import errors |
| Date | 2011-11-15 17:59 -0500 |
| Organization | A noiseless patient Spider |
| Message-ID | <4EC2EEC0.2090806@yahoo.com> (permalink) |
| References | (3 earlier) <D97140E4-9B09-4EAE-BB92-0F038FCDBA5A@gmail.com> <4EC2B656.7050902@sequans.com> <0601B8C7-9AEF-443A-A149-0F7D356345EF@gmail.com> <CAPTjJmrP7fMg9UfxdsR=5j6EW4yFKf8gR4xYQD5zDwMUVxdmjw@mail.gmail.com> <mailman.2750.1321392038.27778.python-list@python.org> |
On 11/15/2011 4:20 PM, David Riley wrote:
...
> 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!
>
> Obviously, that last bit doesn't apply to modules; they're not going to evaluate as False in general. I just bristle when I see people writing "if x" when they really mean "if x is not None", perhaps because it's not The Right Way(tm)? It mostly comes down to aesthetics, I guess. Write what you really mean.
Actually Dave, as your quote from PEP 8 says, the difference is real.
It's not just aesthetics.
Consider this:
x = None
if x:
print('if x == true')
else:
print('if x == false')
if x is None:
print('x is None == true')
else:
print('x is none == false')
y = ''
if y:
print('if y == true')
else:
print('if y == false')
if y is None:
print('y is None == true')
else:
print('y is none == false')
The result is:
if x == false
x is None == true
if y == false
y is none == false
Alan
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Re: suppressing import errors David Riley <fraveydank@gmail.com> - 2011-11-15 16:20 -0500
Re: suppressing import errors Alan Meyer <ameyer2@yahoo.com> - 2011-11-15 17:59 -0500
Re: suppressing import errors David Riley <fraveydank@gmail.com> - 2011-11-15 18:15 -0500
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