You have misunderstood how ==
and or
work. You need to test each and every character separately:
if s[i] == 1 or s[i] == 2 or s[i] == 3 ...:
or use an in
test:
if s[i] in (1, 2, 3, 4, ...):
except that you are testing characters here, not integers, so either turn your character into an integer, or test against digits:
if int(s[i]) in (1, 2, 3, 4, ...):
or
if s[i] in '1234567890':
The latter works because strings are sequences too; testing if one character is in the string '1234567890'
is a valid membership test too.
Since strings are sequences, you can also just loop over them directly:
for char in s:
if char in '1234567890':
No need to use a while
loop and counter there.
This still only tests for digits; to test for letters as well, you could do one of two things:
Use the string
module, it has ascii_letters
and digits
attributes:
import string
for char in s:
if char in string.ascii_letters + string.digits:
or test if the character is between two known characters:
if 'a' <= char <= 'z' or 'A' <= char <= 'Z' or '0' <= char <= '9':
and this works because strings are comparable and sortable; they are smaller or larger according to their position in the ASCII code table.
Your next problem is that you are returning True
too early; you do this for the first match, but you need to test all characters. Only return True
if you didn't find any misses:
for char in s:
if char not in string.ascii_letters + string.digits:
return False
return True
Now we test all characters, return False
for the first character that is not alphanumeric, but only when the loop has completed, do we return True
.