Question

I have a method that sometimes returns a NoneType value. So how can I question a variable that is a NoneType? I need to use if method, for example

if not new:
    new = '#'

I know that is the wrong way and I hope you understand what I meant.

Was it helpful?

Solution

So how can I question a variable that is a NoneType?

Use is operator, like this

if variable is None:

Why this works?

Since None is the sole singleton object of NoneType in Python, we can use is operator to check if a variable has None in it or not.

Quoting from is docs,

The operators is and is not test for object identity: x is y is true if and only if x and y are the same object. x is not y yields the inverse truth value.

Since there can be only one instance of None, is would be the preferred way to check None.


Hear it from the horse's mouth

Quoting Python's Coding Style Guidelines - PEP-008 (jointly defined by Guido himself),

Comparisons to singletons like None should always be done with is or is not, never the equality operators.

OTHER TIPS

if variable is None:
   ...

if variable is not None:
   ...

It can also be done with isinstance as per Alex Hall's answer :

>>> NoneType = type(None)
>>> x = None
>>> type(x) == NoneType
True
>>> isinstance(x, NoneType)
True

isinstance is also intuitive but there is the complication that it requires the line

NoneType = type(None)

which isn't needed for types like int and float.

As pointed out by Aaron Hall's comment:

Since you can't subclass NoneType and since None is a singleton, isinstance should not be used to detect None - instead you should do as the accepted answer says, and use is None or is not None.


Original Answer:

The simplest way however, without the extra line in addition to cardamom's answer is probably:
isinstance(x, type(None))

So how can I question a variable that is a NoneType? I need to use if method

Using isinstance() does not require an is within the if-statement:

if isinstance(x, type(None)): 
    #do stuff

Additional information
You can also check for multiple types in one isinstance() statement as mentioned in the documentation. Just write the types as a tuple.

isinstance(x, (type(None), bytes))

Not sure if this answers the question. But I know this took me a while to figure out. I was looping through a website and all of sudden the name of the authors weren't there anymore. So needed a check statement.

if type(author) == type(None):
     print("my if body")
else:
     print(" my else body")

Author can be any variable in this case, and None can be any type that you are checking for.

Python 2.7 :

x = None
isinstance(x, type(None))

or

isinstance(None, type(None))

==> True

I hope this example will be helpful for you)

print(type(None))  # NoneType

So, you can check type of the variable name

# Example
name = 12  # name = None

if type(name) is type(None):
    print("Can't find name")
else:
    print(name)

I mostly use the following method to check for NoneType.

if (new): # not None
  ...
else: # NoneType
  ...
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