Considering you are already using a regex to extract the words from question and you considering the matched word will be displayed and then linked to an option menu you should compile the regex using the words you want to search for and do a findall with that, you also need to consider the case, if you want Screen and screen to be considered the same word you need to lower the input string:
import re
question = input("Please enter your problem:").lower()
find = ["display","screen","battery"]
r = re.compile(r"\b|\b".join(find))
words = r.findall(question)
if words:
print(words)
print("Is your display not working?")
That like your own code and all the answers here will not return a string, it potentially returns multiple strings including the same word repeated multiple times. If you want to use each word you
If you want the first match or only care if any word matches use search which will also cover is there a simple way of changing 'result' to a string value:
r = re.compile(r"|".join(find))
words = r.search(question)
if words:
print(words.group())
That will give you the first match in sentence for any word in the input sentence.
You also need to use word boundaries if you don't want to match screens
etc..
find = ["display","screen","battery"]
r = re.compile(r"|".join([r"\b{}\b".format(s) for s in find]),re.I)
To do it using sets and get the actual word without a regex you can lower, split and rstrip the punctuation from each word in the sentence, then check if each word is in a set of words using next
to get the first match:
from string import punctuation
question = input("Please enter your problem:").lower()
find = {"display","screen","battery"}
words = (word.rstrip(punctuation) for word in question.split())
result = next((x for x in words if word in find), None)
if result:
print(result)
print("Is your display not working?")
else:
print("Hard Luck")
Lastly if you did not actually want the words, you should not use intersection, just check if the set find is disjoint of words which will be True if any word in words appears in find:
find = {"display","screen","battery"}
words = re.findall("\w+",question)
if not find.isdisjoint(words):
print("Is your display not working?")
else:
print("Hard Luck")
If you want to output a particular message for each word, use a dict with the appropriate string for each word as the value:
import re
question = input("Please enter your problem:").lower()
find = ["display", "screen", "battery"]
r = re.compile(r"\b|\b".join(find))
output = {"screen":"screen message","display":"display message","battery":"battery message"}
word = r.search(question)
if word:
print(output[word.group()])
Or for multiple words:
output = {"screen":"screen message","display":"display message","battery":"battery message"}
words = r.findall(question)
print("\n".join([output[word] for word in words]))
find
?['a'] in ['a']
is going to beFalse
...if result:
should just work.