133

I'm looking for ignore case string comparison in Python.

I tried with:

if line.find('mandy') >= 0:

but no success for ignore case. I need to find a set of words in a given text file. I am reading the file line by line. The word on a line can be mandy, Mandy, MANDY, etc. (I don't want to use toupper/tolower, etc.).

I'm looking for the Python equivalent of the Perl code below.

if ($line=~/^Mandy Pande:/i)

10 Answers 10

226

If you don't want to use str.lower(), you can use a regular expression:

import re

if re.search('mandy', 'Mandy Pande', re.IGNORECASE):
    # Is True
2
  • 2
    re.search(pattern, string, flags=0) docs.python.org/3/library/re.html#re.search Scan through string looking for the first location where the regular expression pattern produces a match, and return a corresponding match object. Return None if no position in the string matches the pattern; note that this is different from finding a zero-length match at some point in the string.
    – Miro
    Jul 28, 2020 at 12:51
  • Be careful about special characters. They can cause problems with this method Sep 19, 2021 at 9:07
45

You are looking for the .lower() method:

string1 = "hi"
string2 = "HI"
if string1.lower() == string2.lower():
    print("Equals!")
else:
    print("Different!")

Btw, There's another post here. Try looking at this.

6
  • 14
    No he's not. " [i don't want to use toupper/tolower etc.]" Jul 5, 2011 at 8:41
  • 1
    i know, i read, but the re.match and re.search solutions don't check for special characters used in regex such as () or [] Jul 5, 2011 at 8:42
  • 2
    what have () or [] to do with the question? Jul 5, 2011 at 8:44
  • This is not a more general answer, because tolower/toupper solutions are inappropriate for Unicode.
    – user824425
    Oct 12, 2016 at 10:35
  • 3
    if you don't really need to avoid it (for some reason like unicode), maching with lower() can be much more efficient than regex match. Jul 7, 2017 at 16:08
28

One can use the in operator after applying str.casefold to both strings.

str.casefold is the recommended method for use in case-insensitive comparison.

Return a casefolded copy of the string. Casefolded strings may be used for caseless matching.

Casefolding is similar to lowercasing but more aggressive because it is intended to remove all case distinctions in a string. For example, the German lowercase letter 'ß' is equivalent to "ss". Since it is already lowercase, lower() would do nothing to 'ß'; casefold() converts it to "ss".

The casefolding algorithm is described in section 3.13 of the Unicode Standard.

New in version 3.3.

For case-insensitive substring search:

needle = "TEST"
haystack = "testing"
if needle.casefold() in haystack.casefold():
    print('Found needle in haystack')

For case-insensitive string comparison:

a = "test"
b = "TEST"
if a.casefold() == b.casefold():
    print('a and b are equal, ignoring case')
1
  • Also seems to support non-ANSI letters like the Danish/Norwegian Æ, Ø and Å.
    – Kristian
    Jan 4, 2023 at 12:18
10

Try:

if haystackstr.lower().find(needlestr.lower()) != -1:
  # True
8
a = "MandY"
a_low = a.lower()
if "mandy" in a_low:
    print("true")

work around

4

you can also use: s.lower() in str.lower()

1
  • 2
    OP said "I don't want to use toupper/tolower, etc." Jan 12, 2020 at 12:54
3
import re
if re.search('(?i)Mandy Pande:', line):
    ...
1
  • this doesn't check / match for control characters in for regexp like [] or () if i'm not wrong... Jul 5, 2011 at 8:40
3

You can use in operator in conjunction with lower method of strings.

if "mandy" in line.lower():

2

See this.

In [14]: re.match("mandy", "MaNdY", re.IGNORECASE)
Out[14]: <_sre.SRE_Match object at 0x23a08b8>
2

If it is a pandas series, you can mention case=False in the str.contains

data['Column_name'].str.contains('abcd', case=False) 

OR if it is just two string comparisons try the other method below

You can use casefold() method. The casefold() method ignores cases when comparing.

firstString = "Hi EVERYONE"
secondString = "Hi everyone"

if firstString.casefold() == secondString.casefold():
    print('The strings are equal.')
else:
    print('The strings are not equal.')

Output:

The strings are equal.

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