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What would be a good way to make a function return True if, and only if, what is inputted is alphanumeric (contains only letters or numbers), without using methods or import?

So far in class, we only covered bools, while loops, and if-statements, and are only allowed to use what we have learned.

This is what I got

def alphanumeric(s):
    i = 0
    while i < len(s):
        if s[i] == 1 or s[i] == 2 or s[i] == 3.....:
            i = i + 1
            return True
        else:
            return False

Is there a more concise way to do this without using methods or import? What I have doesn't work, and returns False no matter what I input.

Resolved. Thank you to all that helped!

1
  • I am only allowed to use bools, while-loops, and if-statements.
    – muros
    Jun 7, 2013 at 23:28

7 Answers 7

3

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.

7
  • The expressions need to compare strings. s[i]=='1' etc. Jun 7, 2013 at 23:31
  • The question says "we only covered bools, while loops, and if-statements, and are only allowed to use what we have learned". So I think there is a need to use a while loop and counter instead of a for loop. (There also may be a need for a teacher who understands that for loops are easier to understand for novices, even if while loops are easier for C experts migrating to Python…)
    – abarnert
    Jun 8, 2013 at 0:00
  • @abarnert: I don't feel to restricted by that list; it may be incomplete, and I do aim to teach a little in these kinds of answers.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Jun 8, 2013 at 0:02
  • Ah! One problem I've encountered. If those special characters (*, #, ~, -, etc.) are embedded somewhere in the middle of the string, this function doesn't catch those for some reason.
    – muros
    Jun 8, 2013 at 0:04
  • @muros: The are not; see the list of printable ASCII characters. 'a' through to 'z' (upper and lowercase) and '0' through to '9' are homogenous sequences.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Jun 8, 2013 at 0:05
2

You can use the Python comparison operators to test against characters, so you could do something like this:

def is_alphanumeric(s):
  for ch in s:
    if not ('a' <= ch <= 'z' or 'A' <= ch <= 'Z' or '0' <= ch <= '9'):
      return False
  return True

That will loop through each character in the string and see if it is between 'a' and 'z' or 'A' and 'Z' or '0' and '9'.

1
  • Thank you! This is exactly what I wanted to know.
    – muros
    Jun 7, 2013 at 23:42
1

Assuming "no methods allowed" means no regex or anything like that, you may use this.

I'll leave it to you to write out string.digits and ascii_letters manually if you have to ;) (That was a joke, you can actually use @mipadi 's method if you aren't allowed to import string)

from string import digits, ascii_letters as alphabet
valid = digits + alphabet
def alphanumeric(s):
    return all(c in valid for c in s)


>>> alphanumeric('1a')
True
>>> alphanumeric('_')
False

Equivalent to:

def alphanumeric(s):
    for c in s:
        if c not in valid:
            return False
    else:
        return True
4
  • There are far more letters than ASCII letters!
    – ikegami
    Jun 7, 2013 at 23:32
  • @abarnert ikegami was alluding to the fact that OP should do that
    – jamylak
    Jun 8, 2013 at 0:00
  • 1
    @jamylak: The OP should do what? Type in thousands of lines worth of Unicode class data? I suppose that would be a good way to convince his teacher he's a smartass, but otherwise, why?
    – abarnert
    Jun 8, 2013 at 0:02
  • Why did you decide to arbitrary exclude one letter and not another. You didn't document your capricious decision. My name is one of the most commonly given name to boys in the US, yet you decided that one spelling of it doesn't consist of letters without a mention of it.
    – ikegami
    Jun 8, 2013 at 0:39
0

You could use the in operator and iterate across the input string s:

for c in s:
    if c not in 'abcdefABC123':

Start with a flag being True and set it to False if any character violates the alphanumeric requirement.

0

First of all, I suppose that s is a String.

So you must do s[i] == '1' since s[i] is a substring and not an integer.

That is the reason your function always return False. Then you return true or false only after looking at the first char, you must test every char until one isn't alphanumeric or until the end.

def alphanumeric(s):
    i = 0
    flag = True
    char = 'a...zA...Z0..9'
    charLen = len(char)
    while (i < len(s) and flag) :
        subflag = False
        charIndex = 0
        while charIndex < charLen:
            subflag = subflag or (s[i] == char[charIndex])
            charIndex += 1 # Equivalent of charIndex = charIndex + 1
        flag = flag and subflag
        i = i +1
    return flag
0

A few suggestions:

First, you're attempting to return True when you see an alphanumeric character - you need to check all of the characters before returning True (though you can return False when you see a single non-alphanumeric character).

Second, if s is a string, s[i] is a character (i.e. '1', not 1).

Third, when you wrote

if s[i] == 1 or 2 or 3

you're evaluating (s[i] == 1), then 2 by itself as a boolean (which is always false), etc. To compare s[i] to each, you need

if s[i] == '1' or s[i] == '2' or s[i] == '3'

or, more concisely,

if s[i] in ['1', '2', '3', ...]
1
  • BBrown is correct - you can also use if s[i] in '123456...' Jun 7, 2013 at 23:46
0
def isAlphaNumeric(myString):
    return not any((c for c in myString if not c in "abcdef...ABC...123"))

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