You can use Python in
operator or not in
operator to check if a string is not present in the list. The cheapest and most readable solution is to use the in
operator (or in your specific case, not in
)
Python string not in the list
Simple example code.
The operator not in
is defined to have the inverse true value of in
.
l1 = ['A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'A', 'A', 'C']
# string in the list
if 'A' in l1:
print('A is present in the list')
# string not in the list
if 'X' not in l1:
print('X is not present in the list')
Output:
Using Python f-strings with user input
l1 = ['A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'A', 'A', 'C']
s = input('Please enter a character A-Z:\n')
if s in l1:
print(f'{s} is present in the list')
else:
print(f'{s} is not present in the list')
Using count()
The count() function to get the number of occurrences of a string in the list. Zero means that string is not present in the list.
l1 = ['A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'A', 'A', 'C']
s = 'A'
count = l1.count(s)
if count > 0:
print(f'{s} is present in the list for {count} times.')
Do comment if you have any doubts or suggestions on this Python list topic.
Note: IDE: PyCharm 2021.3.3 (Community Edition)
Windows 10
Python 3.10.1
All Python Examples are in Python 3, so Maybe its different from python 2 or upgraded versions.