The operators in and not in test for collection membership. [...] The collection membership test has traditionally been bound to sequences; an object is a member of a collection if the collection is a sequence and contains an element equal to that object. However, it make sense for many other object types to support membership tests without being a sequence. In particular, dictionaries (for keys) and sets support membership testing.
Classes can implement the special method __contains__ to override the default behavior (iterating over the sequence) and thus can provide a more (or less) efficient way to test membership than comparing every element of the container.
The membership test operators (in and not in) are normally implemented as an iteration through a sequence. However, container objects can supply the following special method with a more efficient implementation, which also does not require the object be a sequence.
Since you have a list in your example, it is iterated over and each element is compared until a match is found or the list is exhausted. The time complexity is usually O(n).
It depends on the right hand operand:
Classes can implement the special method
__contains__
to override the default behavior (iterating over the sequence) and thus can provide a more (or less) efficient way to test membership than comparing every element of the container.Since you have a list in your example, it is iterated over and each element is compared until a match is found or the list is exhausted. The time complexity is usually
O(n)
.The complexity for lists is:
For sets it is:
http://wiki.python.org/moin/TimeComplexity