I'm looking for a string.contains
or string.indexof
method in Python.
I want to do:
if not somestring.contains("blah"):
continue
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You can use the in
operator:
if "blah" not in somestring:
continue
__contains__(self, item)
, __iter__(self)
, and __getitem__(self, key)
in that order to determine whether an item lies in a given contains. Implement at least one of those methods to make in
available to your custom type.
– BallpointBen
Aug 17 '18 at 7:02
TypeError: argument of type 'NoneType' is not iterable
– Big Pumpkin
Oct 10 '18 at 22:44
in
operator use the Rabin-Carp algorithm?
– Sam Chats
Dec 18 '18 at 20:23
If it's just a substring search you can use string.find("substring")
.
You do have to be a little careful with find
, index
, and in
though, as they are substring searches. In other words, this:
s = "This be a string"
if s.find("is") == -1:
print("No 'is' here!")
else:
print("Found 'is' in the string.")
It would print Found 'is' in the string.
Similarly, if "is" in s:
would evaluate to True
. This may or may not be what you want.
if ' is ' in s:
which will return False
as is (probably) expected.
– aaronasterling
Aug 9 '10 at 3:22
\bis\b
(word boundaries).
– Bob
Nov 8 '12 at 0:07
' is '
, notably, it won't catch This is, a comma'
or 'It is.'
.
– Bob
Jan 13 '18 at 15:46
s.split(string.punctuation + string.whitespace)
would split even once; split
isn't like the strip
/rstrip
/lstrip
family of functions, it only splits when it sees all of the delimiter characters, contiguously, in that exact order. If you want to split on character classes, you're back to regular expressions (at which point, searching for r'\bis\b'
without splitting is the simpler, faster way to go).
– ShadowRanger
Feb 1 '18 at 1:39
'is' not in (w.lower() for w in s.translate(string.maketrans(' ' * len(string.punctuation + string.whitespace), string.punctuation + string.whitespace)).split()
- ok, point taken. This is now ridiculous...
– Jamie Bull
Feb 1 '18 at 11:52
Does Python have a string contains substring method?
99% of use cases will be covered using the keyword, in
, which returns True
or False
:
'substring' in any_string
For the use case of getting the index, use str.find
(which returns -1 on failure, and has optional positional arguments):
start = 0
stop = len(any_string)
any_string.find('substring', start, stop)
or str.index
(like find
but raises ValueError on failure):
start = 100
end = 1000
any_string.index('substring', start, end)
Use the in
comparison operator because
>>> 'foo' in '**foo**'
True
The opposite (complement), which the original question asked for, is not in
:
>>> 'foo' not in '**foo**' # returns False
False
This is semantically the same as not 'foo' in '**foo**'
but it's much more readable and explicitly provided for in the language as a readability improvement.
__contains__
The "contains" method implements the behavior for in
. This example,
str.__contains__('**foo**', 'foo')
returns True
. You could also call this function from the instance of the superstring:
'**foo**'.__contains__('foo')
But don't. Methods that start with underscores are considered semantically non-public. The only reason to use this is when implementing or extending the in
and not in
functionality (e.g. if subclassing str
):
class NoisyString(str):
def __contains__(self, other):
print(f'testing if "{other}" in "{self}"')
return super(NoisyString, self).__contains__(other)
ns = NoisyString('a string with a substring inside')
and now:
>>> 'substring' in ns
testing if "substring" in "a string with a substring inside"
True
find
and index
to test for "contains"Don't use the following string methods to test for "contains":
>>> '**foo**'.index('foo')
2
>>> '**foo**'.find('foo')
2
>>> '**oo**'.find('foo')
-1
>>> '**oo**'.index('foo')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<pyshell#40>", line 1, in <module>
'**oo**'.index('foo')
ValueError: substring not found
Other languages may have no methods to directly test for substrings, and so you would have to use these types of methods, but with Python, it is much more efficient to use the in
comparison operator.
Also, these are not drop-in replacements for in
. You may have to handle the exception or -1
cases, and if they return 0
(because they found the substring at the beginning) the boolean interpretation is False
instead of True
.
If you really mean not any_string.startswith(substring)
then say it.
We can compare various ways of accomplishing the same goal.
import timeit
def in_(s, other):
return other in s
def contains(s, other):
return s.__contains__(other)
def find(s, other):
return s.find(other) != -1
def index(s, other):
try:
s.index(other)
except ValueError:
return False
else:
return True
perf_dict = {
'in:True': min(timeit.repeat(lambda: in_('superstring', 'str'))),
'in:False': min(timeit.repeat(lambda: in_('superstring', 'not'))),
'__contains__:True': min(timeit.repeat(lambda: contains('superstring', 'str'))),
'__contains__:False': min(timeit.repeat(lambda: contains('superstring', 'not'))),
'find:True': min(timeit.repeat(lambda: find('superstring', 'str'))),
'find:False': min(timeit.repeat(lambda: find('superstring', 'not'))),
'index:True': min(timeit.repeat(lambda: index('superstring', 'str'))),
'index:False': min(timeit.repeat(lambda: index('superstring', 'not'))),
}
And now we see that using in
is much faster than the others.
Less time to do an equivalent operation is better:
>>> perf_dict
{'in:True': 0.16450627865128808,
'in:False': 0.1609668098178645,
'__contains__:True': 0.24355481654697542,
'__contains__:False': 0.24382793854783813,
'find:True': 0.3067379407923454,
'find:False': 0.29860888058124146,
'index:True': 0.29647137792585454,
'index:False': 0.5502287584545229}
str.index
and str.find
? How else would you suggest someone find the index of a substring instead of just whether it exists or not? (or did you mean avoid using them in place of contains - so don't use s.find(ss) != -1
instead of ss in s
?)
– coderforlife
Jun 10 '15 at 3:35
re
module. I have not yet found a use for str.index or str.find myself in any code I have written yet.
– Aaron Hall♦
Jun 10 '15 at 3:39
str.count
as well (string.count(something) != 0
). shudder
– cs95
Jun 5 '19 at 3:05
if needle in haystack:
is the normal use, as @Michael says -- it relies on the in
operator, more readable and faster than a method call.
If you truly need a method instead of an operator (e.g. to do some weird key=
for a very peculiar sort...?), that would be 'haystack'.__contains__
. But since your example is for use in an if
, I guess you don't really mean what you say;-). It's not good form (nor readable, nor efficient) to use special methods directly -- they're meant to be used, instead, through the operators and builtins that delegate to them.
in
Python strings and listsHere are a few useful examples that speak for themselves concerning the in
method:
>>> "foo" in "foobar"
True
>>> "foo" in "Foobar"
False
>>> "foo" in "Foobar".lower()
True
>>> "foo".capitalize() in "Foobar"
True
>>> "foo" in ["bar", "foo", "foobar"]
True
>>> "foo" in ["fo", "o", "foobar"]
False
>>> ["foo" in a for a in ["fo", "o", "foobar"]]
[False, False, True]
Caveat. Lists are iterables, and the in
method acts on iterables, not just strings.
["bar", "foo", "foobar"] in "foof"
?
– CaffeinatedMike
Jun 9 '17 at 18:41
If you are happy with "blah" in somestring
but want it to be a function/method call, you can probably do this
import operator
if not operator.contains(somestring, "blah"):
continue
All operators in Python can be more or less found in the operator module including in
.
So apparently there is nothing similar for vector-wise comparison. An obvious Python way to do so would be:
names = ['bob', 'john', 'mike']
any(st in 'bob and john' for st in names)
>> True
any(st in 'mary and jane' for st in names)
>> False
in
should not be used with lists because it does a linear scan of the elements and is slow compared. Use a set instead, especially if membership tests are to be done repeatedly.
– cs95
Jun 5 '19 at 3:06
You can use y.count()
.
It will return the integer value of the number of times a sub string appears in a string.
For example:
string.count("bah") >> 0
string.count("Hello") >> 1
Here is your answer:
if "insert_char_or_string_here" in "insert_string_to_search_here":
#DOSTUFF
For checking if it is false:
if not "insert_char_or_string_here" in "insert_string_to_search_here":
#DOSTUFF
OR:
if "insert_char_or_string_here" not in "insert_string_to_search_here":
#DOSTUFF
You can use regular expressions to get the occurrences:
>>> import re
>>> print(re.findall(r'( |t)', to_search_in)) # searches for t or space
['t', ' ', 't', ' ', ' ']