How do I search for items that contain the string 'abc'
in the following list?
xs = ['abc-123', 'def-456', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456']
The following checks if 'abc'
is in the list, but does not detect 'abc-123'
and 'abc-456'
:
if 'abc' in xs:
How do I search for items that contain the string 'abc'
in the following list?
xs = ['abc-123', 'def-456', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456']
The following checks if 'abc'
is in the list, but does not detect 'abc-123'
and 'abc-456'
:
if 'abc' in xs:
To check for the presence of 'abc'
in any string in the list:
xs = ['abc-123', 'def-456', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456']
if any("abc" in s for s in xs):
...
To get all the items containing 'abc'
:
matching = [s for s in xs if "abc" in s]
filter(lambda element: 'abc' in element, some_list)
index()
method: try: return mylist.index(myitem); except ValueError: pass
Oct 16, 2014 at 12:02
"abc" in some_string
will check for presence of "abc"
as an exact, contiguous substring of some_string
, so both "abc" in "cba-4123"
and "abc" in "a-b-c"
will return False
. No modification of the code required.
Sep 13, 2021 at 9:12
Just throwing this out there: if you happen to need to match against more than one string, for example abc
and def
, you can combine two comprehensions as follows:
matchers = ['abc','def']
matching = [s for s in my_list if any(xs in s for xs in matchers)]
Output:
['abc-123', 'def-456', 'abc-456']
{s for s in my_list for xs in matchers if xs in s}
(note the curly brackets to create a unique set). Might be easier to read, but could be slower if most s
values will have a match, since your any
will efficiently stop at the first match.
Jan 9, 2018 at 18:47
matchers
). I just changed any
for all
and it did the trick: matching = [s for s in my_list if all(xs in s for xs in matchers)]
Use filter
to get all the elements that have 'abc'
:
>>> xs = ['abc-123', 'def-456', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456']
>>> list(filter(lambda x: 'abc' in x, xs))
['abc-123', 'abc-456']
One can also use a list comprehension:
>>> [x for x in xs if 'abc' in x]
If you just need to know if 'abc' is in one of the items, this is the shortest way:
if 'abc' in str(my_list):
Note: this assumes 'abc' is an alphanumeric text. Do not use it if 'abc' could be just a special character (i.e. []', ).
This is quite an old question, but I offer this answer because the previous answers do not cope with items in the list that are not strings (or some kind of iterable object). Such items would cause the entire list comprehension to fail with an exception.
To gracefully deal with such items in the list by skipping the non-iterable items, use the following:
[el for el in lst if isinstance(el, collections.Iterable) and (st in el)]
then, with such a list:
lst = [None, 'abc-123', 'def-456', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456', 123]
st = 'abc'
you will still get the matching items (['abc-123', 'abc-456']
)
The test for iterable may not be the best. Got it from here: In Python, how do I determine if an object is iterable?
[el for el in lst if el and (st in el)]
make more sense in the given example?
my_list = ['abc-123', 'def-456', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456']
no need to over complicate it.
for item in my_list:
if item.find("abc") != -1:
print item
if 'abc' in item
rather using item.find('abc') == -1
.
Mar 10, 2016 at 22:22
I am new to Python. I got the code below working and made it easy to understand:
my_list = ['abc-123', 'def-456', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456']
for item in my_list:
if 'abc' in item:
print(item)
Use the __contains__()
method of Pythons string class.:
a = ['abc-123', 'def-456', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456']
for i in a:
if i.__contains__("abc") :
print(i, " is containing")
I needed the list indices that correspond to a match as follows:
lst=['abc-123', 'def-456', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456']
[n for n, x in enumerate(lst) if 'abc' in x]
output
[0, 3]
If you want to get list of data for multiple substrings
you can change it this way
some_list = ['abc-123', 'def-456', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456']
# select element where "abc" or "ghi" is included
find_1 = "abc"
find_2 = "ghi"
result = [element for element in some_list if find_1 in element or find_2 in element]
# Output ['abc-123', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456']
mylist=['abc','def','ghi','abc']
pattern=re.compile(r'abc')
pattern.findall(mylist)
import re
mylist=['abc','def','ghi','abcff']
my_list_string=''.join(mylist)
string_to_find="abc"
res=re.findall(string_to_find,my_list_string)
print(res)
Aug 14, 2018 at 12:32
Adding nan to list, and the below works for me:
some_list = ['abc-123', 'def-456', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456',np.nan]
any([i for i in [x for x in some_list if str(x) != 'nan'] if "abc" in i])
my_list = ['abc-123', 'def-456', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456']
for item in my_list:
if (item.find('abc')) != -1:
print ('Found at ', item)
I did a search, which requires you to input a certain value, then it will look for a value from the list which contains your input:
my_list = ['abc-123',
'def-456',
'ghi-789',
'abc-456'
]
imp = raw_input('Search item: ')
for items in my_list:
val = items
if any(imp in val for items in my_list):
print(items)
Try searching for 'abc'.
def find_dog(new_ls):
splt = new_ls.split()
if 'dog' in splt:
print("True")
else:
print('False')
find_dog("Is there a dog here?")
Question : Give the informations of abc
a = ['abc-123', 'def-456', 'ghi-789', 'abc-456']
aa = [ string for string in a if "abc" in string]
print(aa)
Output => ['abc-123', 'abc-456']