Section 6.4 The in and not in operators
The
in operator tests if one string is a substring of another:
Note that a string is a substring of itself, and the empty string is a substring of any other string. (Also note that computer scientists like to think about these edge cases quite carefully!)
However, remember how you were able to check to see if an βaβ was in βappleβ? Letβs try that again to see if thereβs an βaβ somewhere in the following list.
Clearly, we can tell that a is in the word apple, and absolutely, and application. For some reason though, the Python interpreter returns False. Why is that? When we use the
in and not in operators on lists, Python checks to see if the item on the left side of the expression is equivalent to an element in the item on the right side of the expression. In this case, Python is checking whether or not an element of the list is the string βaβ - nothing more or less than that.
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