Similar to a mechanical device that wears out faster with heavy use, so also does the depth of discharge (DoD) determine the cycle count. The shorter the discharge (low DoD), the longer the battery will last. If at all possible, avoid full discharges and charge the battery more often between uses. Partial discharge on Li-ion is fine. There is no memory and the battery does not need periodic full discharge cycles to prolong life.
To answer your question: No.
Side note: Don't blindly trust the manufacturer. Of course Apple wants you to wear out your laptop as fast as possible, once it's past the warranty. They're a business.
Side note 2: Laptops do NOT charge your battery to 100%. Your battery indicator is fake. 100% on your battery indicator is more like 90% in reality. The charger automatically cuts off before it reaches the true 100%, so all of the comments in this thread about 100% being bad are wrong, because no modern laptops will truly let you reach 100%.
My understanding (again, uncited, like almost everything in these threads) is that one might /perceive/ a different result than this because the /software/ calibrates what 0 and 100% mean based on observation.
If you never observe a zero (or, presumably, a 100%), it might recalibrate incorrectly. Again, this is based on old and uncited knowledge. There's surely someone here involved in writing power management software that could chime in.
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/how_to_prolong_li...
Summary:
Similar to a mechanical device that wears out faster with heavy use, so also does the depth of discharge (DoD) determine the cycle count. The shorter the discharge (low DoD), the longer the battery will last. If at all possible, avoid full discharges and charge the battery more often between uses. Partial discharge on Li-ion is fine. There is no memory and the battery does not need periodic full discharge cycles to prolong life.
To answer your question: No.
Side note: Don't blindly trust the manufacturer. Of course Apple wants you to wear out your laptop as fast as possible, once it's past the warranty. They're a business.
Side note 2: Laptops do NOT charge your battery to 100%. Your battery indicator is fake. 100% on your battery indicator is more like 90% in reality. The charger automatically cuts off before it reaches the true 100%, so all of the comments in this thread about 100% being bad are wrong, because no modern laptops will truly let you reach 100%.