Check if multiple strings exist in another string
any()
is by far the best approach if all you want is True
or False
, but if you want to know specifically which string/strings match, you can use a couple things.
If you want the first match (with False
as a default):
match = next((x for x in a if x in str), False)
If you want to get all matches (including duplicates):
matches = [x for x in a if x in str]
If you want to get all non-duplicate matches (disregarding order):
matches = {x for x in a if x in str}
If you want to get all non-duplicate matches in the right order:
matches = []
for x in a:
if x in str and x not in matches:
matches.append(x)
You should be careful if the strings in a
or str
gets longer. The straightforward solutions take O(S*(A^2)), where S
is the length of str
and A is the sum of the lenghts of all strings in a
. For a faster solution, look at Aho-Corasick algorithm for string matching, which runs in linear time O(S+A).
Just to add some diversity with regex
:
import re
if any(re.findall(r'a|b|c', str, re.IGNORECASE)):
print 'possible matches thanks to regex'
else:
print 'no matches'
or if your list is too long - any(re.findall(r'|'.join(a), str, re.IGNORECASE))
You can use any
:
a_string = "A string is more than its parts!"
matches = ["more", "wholesome", "milk"]
if any(x in a_string for x in matches):
Similarly to check if all the strings from the list are found, use all
instead of any
.