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I was trying to create a function that only recieves tuples that have elements only with the letters C,B,E,D. Arguments like CEE, DDBBB, ECDBE, or CCCCB. The input was going to be a tup = ('CEE', 'DDBBB', 'ECDBE', 'CCCCB') and using other functions that i created should convert them in a number that represents a position.

 def obter_pin(tup):
        pin=()
        posicao=5
        if not 4<=len(tup)<=10 or 'CBED' not in tup:
            raise ValueError('obter pin: argumento invalido')
        else:    
            for ele in tup:
            dig=obter_digito(ele,posicao)
            posicao=dig
            pin+=(dig,)
        return pin
5
  • 1
    Whats the output? Oct 25, 2021 at 19:25
  • 3
    What is your error? What went wrong? I don't see the code you tried to enforce the tuple constraints.
    – Jab
    Oct 25, 2021 at 19:26
  • @DaniMesejo the output is (1, 9, 8, 5), but the function works except for the part of raising the errror, it should raise a error if the tuple as other letters instead of C,B,E,D.
    – user17243912
    Oct 25, 2021 at 19:27
  • @Jab I don't have a error, I wanted to know how I can restrain the function to raise an error if the input has lettes besides C,B,E,D in the tuple. Like, ('A','C'), i want to raise an error in that situatioon.
    – user17243912
    Oct 25, 2021 at 19:30
  • Echoing @OneCricketeer the for reopening a question is listed here -> What if I disagree with the closure of a question? How can I reopen it?
    – Henry Ecker
    Oct 25, 2021 at 19:42

3 Answers 3

2

Using set comparison:

>>> allow = {'C', 'B', 'E', 'D'}
>>> tup1 = ('CEE', 'DDBBB', 'ECDBE', 'CCCCB')
>>> tup2 = ('CEE', 'DDBBB', 'ECDBE', 'CCCCBA')
>>> allow >= set().union(*tup1)
True
>>> allow >= set().union(*tup2)
False
0

You can use this one-line function.

Function definition:

def myfunction (t):
  return all(set(e).issubset('CBED') for e in t)

Function in use:

tup1 = ('CEE', 'DDBBB', 'ECDBE', 'CCCCB')
tup2 = ('CEE', 'DDBBB', 'ECDBE', 'GOO')
tup3 = ('CEE', 'DDBBB', 'ECDBE', 'ALPHA')

print(myfunction(tup1)) #True
print(myfunction(tup2)) #Fale
print(myfunction(tup3)) #Fale
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Even though I like @Jab's solution much better, I just wanted to add another way of going about it:

invalid = any(s.remove('C').remove('B').remove('E').remove('D') for s in tup)

Much better:

invalid = any(s.strip('CBED') for s in tup)

Or:

if ''.join(tup).strip('CBED'):
...
3
  • 1
    you could use any(s.strip('CBED') for s in tup)
    – Jab
    Oct 25, 2021 at 20:15
  • Completely forgot about that. Even better.
    – mapf
    Oct 25, 2021 at 20:16
  • You can use: not ''.join(t).strip('CBED')
    – AziMez
    Oct 25, 2021 at 20:38

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