is None or == None ?
Stefan Behnel
stefan_ml at behnel.de
Sat Nov 7 02:20:20 EST 2009
mk, 06.11.2009 15:32:
> Stefan Behnel wrote:
>> class Test(object):
>> def __eq__(self, other):
>> return other == None
>>
>> print Test() == None, Test() is None
>
> Err, I don't want to sound daft, but what is wrong in this example? It
> should work as expected:
>
> >>> class Test(object):
> ... def __eq__(self, other):
> ... return other == None
> ...
> >>> Test() is None
> False
> >>> Test() == None
> True
Yes, and it shows you that things can compare equal to None without being None.
> Or perhaps your example was supposed to show that I should test for
> identity with None, not for value with None?
Instead of "value" you mean "equality" here, I suppose. While there are
certain rare use cases where evaluating non-None objects as equal to None
makes sense, in normal use, you almost always want to know if a value is
exactly None, not just something that happens to return True when
calculating its equality to None, be it because of a programmer's concious
consideration or buggy implementation.
Stefan
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