Where is the NoneType located in Python 3.x?
You can use type(None)
to get the type object, but you want to use isinstance()
here, not type() in {...}
:
assert isinstance(value, (str, type(None)))
The NoneType
object is not otherwise exposed anywhere.
I'd not use type checking for that at all really, I'd use:
assert value is None or isinstance(value, str)
as None
is a singleton (very much on purpose) and NoneType
explicitly forbids subclassing anyway:
>>> type(None)() is None
True
>>> class NoneSubclass(type(None)):
... pass
...
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: type 'NoneType' is not an acceptable base type
types.NoneType
is being reintroduced in Python 3.10.
What’s New In Python 3.10
Improved Modules
types
Reintroduced the
types.EllipsisType
,types.NoneType
andtypes.NotImplementedType
classes, providing a new set of types readily interpretable by type checkers. (Contributed by Bas van Beek in bpo-41810.)
The discussion about the change was motivated by a need for types.EllipsisType
, leading to types.NoneType
also being added for consistency.