I understand that they are both essentially the same thing, but in terms of style, which is the better (more Pythonic) one to use to create an empty list or dict?
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Answer
In terms of speed, it’s no competition for empty lists/dicts:
>>> from timeit import timeit >>> timeit("[]") 0.040084982867934334 >>> timeit("list()") 0.17704233359267718 >>> timeit("{}") 0.033620194745424214 >>> timeit("dict()") 0.1821558326547077
and for non-empty:
>>> timeit("[1,2,3]") 0.24316302770330367 >>> timeit("list((1,2,3))") 0.44744206316727286 >>> timeit("list(foo)", setup="foo=(1,2,3)") 0.446036018543964 >>> timeit("{'a':1, 'b':2, 'c':3}") 0.20868602015059423 >>> timeit("dict(a=1, b=2, c=3)") 0.47635635255323905 >>> timeit("dict(bar)", setup="bar=[('a', 1), ('b', 2), ('c', 3)]") 0.9028228448029267
Also, using the bracket notation lets you use list and dictionary comprehensions, which may be reason enough.