I bet not. But you will have to show us a specific ad and then the actual spec sheet for the battery to find out, one way or the other.
I think it important to note here that it is highly unlikely Apple, Samsung, MSI, ASUS, etc. are the actual manufacturers of the batteries that go into their devices. Surely they outsource their batteries to an OEM battery manufacturer.
That said, is the capacity in kilowatt-hours really the spec you are most concerned about? Or is battery runtime?
Me? I want to know how long my laptop, cell phone, or Bluetooth speaker will run on battery. If the battery maker claims the battery charged to 100% will give me 10 hours of runtime, but when I get my new laptop home and discover the laptop only allows me to charge to 80% providing just 8 hours of runtime, I might feel I am getting ripped off - depending on how the laptop was "marketed".
Except that really makes no sense. Who wants to wait around for their laptop to charge before using it? No one - ever.
All laptop chargers
that come with "genuine" laptops (not counterfeit laptops) are designed to provide enough power to run the laptop and charge the battery at the same time. And yes, that is a blanket/absolute statement, but just a fact.
"IF" the battery is heavily discharged, the laptop's power monitoring circuits "may" dim the monitor or throttle back performance a bit, or even slow down charging. But the chargers will still will allow the laptop to run while the battery charges.
BTW, when having to buy a replacement charger, this fact (running the laptop and charging the battery at the same time) is exactly why we must
always buy a replacement charger with the same
or greater current/wattage capability - NEVER less current. And always the same output voltage.
If you have no choice but to buy a less capable charger, then
@Solid State Soul ( SSS ) is correct; don't use the laptop while charging.