Python “==” vs “is”

HARSH MITTAL
2 min readDec 24, 2022

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Most of us have used == and is interchangeably in our code. Everything will work fine but suddenly it will not. Let’s discuss this in detail.

Check out this YouTube link for more details:

YouTube Link

Original Post:

http://www.harshmittal.com/tutorials/Is-And-Equal-In-Python/

Definition

== is for value equality. It’s used to know if two objects have the same value. is is for reference equality. It’s used to know if two references refer (or point) to the same object, i.e if they’re identical. Two objects are identical if they have the same memory address.

Simplification

== checks if value is equal or not and is checks if they are exact same object.

Let’s understand using id()

id() is a built-in function in Python. It accepts a single parameter and is used to return the identity of an object.

Complete Code: GitHub Link

Float

a = 1.0
b = 1.0
c = 1

print(id(a))
print(id(b))
print(id(c))

print("\nFor Float:")
print(a==b)
print(a is b)
print("\nFor Float and Integer:")
print(a==c)
print(a is c)

## Output
"""
1885460600320
1885460600008
140722084511264

For Float:
True
False

For Float and Integer:
True
False
"""

We see over here that id is different even though they have same value, thus is gives False whereas == gives True .

List

a = [1,2,3,4]
b = [1,2,3,4]
print(id(a))
print(id(b))
print("--------")
print(a==b)
print(a is b)

## Output
"""
1885462242952
1885462242824
--------
True
False
"""

For Same Object:

a = [1,2,3,4]
b = a
print(id(a))
print(id(b))
print("--------")
print(a==b)
print(a is b)

## Output
"""
1885461966664
1885461966664
--------
True
True
"""
b[0] = 34
print(a)
print("--------")
print(a==b)
print(a is b)

## Output
"""
[34, 2, 3, 4]
--------
True
True
"""
c = a[:]
print(id(a))
print(id(c))
print("--------")
print(a==c)
print(a is c)

## Output
"""1885461966664
1885461989512
--------
True
False
"""

Integer

a = 10
b = 10
print(id(a))
print(id(b))
print("--------")
print(a==b)
print(a is b)
a = -1
b = -1
print(id(a))
print(id(b))
print("--------")
print(a==b)
print(a is b)

"""
Output:

140722084511552
140722084511552
--------
True
True
140722084511200
140722084511200
--------
True
True
"""

Now Why is that? Let’s try for bigger numbers.

a = 257
b = 257
print(id(a))
print(id(b))
print("--------")
print(a==b)
print(a is b)
a = -6
b = -6
print(id(a))
print(id(b))
print("--------")
print(a==b)
print(a is b)

"""
Output:
1885461868176
1885461868208
--------
True
False
1885461867568
1885461867920
--------
True
False
"""

Integer Explanation

The current implementation keeps an array of integer objects for all integers between -5 and 256. When you create an int in that range, you just return a reference to the existing object.

String

a = "Subcribe @HarshMittalYoutube"
b = "Subcribe @HarshMittalYoutube"
c = a
print(id(a))
print(id(b))
print("--------")
print(a==b)
print(a is b)
print("--------")
print(a==c)
print(a is c)

"""
Output:
1885462270320
1885462270800
--------
True
False
--------
True
True
"""

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HARSH MITTAL
HARSH MITTAL

Written by HARSH MITTAL

Software Developer, with extensive knowledge in Software Development, Robotics and Machine Learning.

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