If I interpret your question correctly, you can use all
.
In your case, assuming:
content = [
"z:/prop/zebra/rig/cool_v001.ma",
"sjasdjaskkk",
"thisIsNoGood",
"shakalaka",
"z:/prop/zebra/rig/cool_v999.ma"
]
string = "prop zebra cool"
You can do the following:
assets = []
matchlist = string.split(' ')
for c in content:
if all(s in c for s in matchlist):
assets.append(c)
print assets
Alternative Method
If you want to have more control (ie. you want to make sure that you only match strings where your words appear in the specified order), then you could go with regular expressions:
import re
# convert content to a single, tab-separated, string
contentstring = '\t'.join(content)
# generate a regex string to match
matchlist = [r'(?:{0})[^\t]+'.format(s) for s in string.split(' ')]
matchstring = r'([^\t]+{0})'.format(''.join(matchlist))
assets = re.findall(matchstring, contentstring)
print assets
Assuming \t
does not appear in the strings of content
, you can use it as a separator and join the list into a single string (obviously, you can pick any other separator that better suits you).
Then you can build your regex so that it matches any substring containing your words and any other character, except \t
.
In this case, matchstring
results in:
([^\t]+(?:prop)[^\t]+(?:zebra)[^\t]+(?:cool)[^\t]+)
where:
(?:word)
means that word
is matched but not returned
[^\t]+
means that all characters but \t
will match
- the outer
()
will return whole strings matching your rule (in this case z:/prop/zebra/rig/cool_v001.ma
and z:/prop/zebra/rig/cool_v999.ma
)
content
items = ["prop", "zebra", "cool"]
andcontent = ["prop"]
what would be the output?