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python - Why is any (True for ... if cond) much faster than any (cond for ...)?

Two similar ways to check whether a list contains an odd number:

any(x % 2 for x in a)
any(True for x in a if x % 2)

Timing results with a = [0] * 10000000 (five attempts each, times in seconds):

0.60  0.60  0.60  0.61  0.63  any(x % 2 for x in a)
0.36  0.36  0.36  0.37  0.37  any(True for x in a if x % 2)

Why is the second way almost twice as fast?

My testing code:

from timeit import repeat

setup = 'a = [0] * 10000000'

expressions = [
    'any(x % 2 for x in a)',
    'any(True for x in a if x % 2)',
]

for expression in expressions:
    times = sorted(repeat(expression, setup, number=1))
    print(*('%.2f ' % t for t in times), expression)

Try it online!

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The first method sends everything to any() whilst the second only sends to any() when there's an odd number, so any() has fewer elements to go through.


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