Use of Lists, Tupples, or Sets in IF statement.
Chris Angelico
rosuav at gmail.com
Mon Mar 14 20:33:07 EDT 2016
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Mon Mar 14 20:33:07 EDT 2016
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On Tue, Mar 15, 2016 at 11:26 AM, <jj0gen0info at gmail.com> wrote: > In Python is it possible to comparison-equate a variable to a List, Tupple, or Set and have it return True if the contents of the variable matches an element in the List, Tupple, or Set. > > E.g. > > x = "apple" > > x-list = ["apple", "banana", "peach"] > > If x == x-list: > print('Comparison is True') > else: > print('Comparison is False') Yep! What you're looking for is the "membership" operator. It's spelled "in": >>> x = "apple" >>> x_list = ["apple", "banana", "peach"] >>> >>> if x in x_list: ... print("That is a fruit.") ... else: ... print("That is not a fruit.") ... That is a fruit. >>> x = "jump" >>> if x in x_list: ... print("That is a fruit.") ... else: ... print("You must be Chell.") ... You must be Chell. ChrisA
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