What is the best (idiomatic) way to check the type of a Python variable? [duplicate]

I need to know if a variable in Python is a string or a dict. Is there anything wrong with the following code?

if type(x) == type(str()):
    do_something_with_a_string(x)
elif type(x) == type(dict()):
    do_somethting_with_a_dict(x)
else:
    raise ValueError

Update: I accepted avisser’s answer (though I will change my mind if someone explains why isinstance is preferred over type(x) is).

But thanks to nakedfanatic for reminding me that it’s often cleaner to use a dict (as a case statement) than an if/elif/else series.

Let me elaborate on my use case. If a variable is a string, I need to put it in a list. If it’s a dict, I need a list of the unique values. Here’s what I came up with:

def value_list(x):
    cases = {str: lambda t: [t],
             dict: lambda t: list(set(t.values()))}
    try:
        return cases[type(x)](x)
    except KeyError:
        return None

If isinstance is preferred, how would you write this value_list() function?

10 Answers
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