Timing results in Python 3.12 (and similar with 3.11 and 3.13 on different machines):
When x = None:
13.8 ns x is None
10.1 ns if x is None: pass
When x = True:
13.9 ns x is None
11.1 ns if x is None: pass
How can doing more take less time?
Why is if x is None: pass
faster, when it does the same x is None
check and then additionally checks the truth value of the result (and does or skips the pass
)?
Times on other versions/machines:
Benchmark script (Attempt This Online!):
from timeit import repeat
import sys
for x in None, True:
print(f'When {x = }:')
for code in ['x is None', 'if x is None: pass'] * 2:
t = min(repeat(code, f'{x=}', repeat=100))
print(f'{t*1e3:4.1f} ns ', code)
print()
print('Python:', sys.version)
Look at the disassembled code:
>>> import dis
>>> dis.dis('if x is None: pass')
0 0 RESUME 0
1 2 LOAD_NAME 0 (x)
4 POP_JUMP_IF_NOT_NONE 1 (to 8)
6 RETURN_CONST 0 (None)
>> 8 RETURN_CONST 0 (None)
>>> dis.dis('x is None')
0 0 RESUME 0
1 2 LOAD_NAME 0 (x)
4 LOAD_CONST 0 (None)
6 IS_OP 0
8 RETURN_VALUE
The if
case has a special POP_JUMP_IF_NOT_NONE
operation, which is faster than a LOAD_CONST
plus IS_OP
. You can read the detailed discussion about it here: https://github.com/faster-cpython/ideas/discussions/154.