Dictionary

wxjmfauth at gmail.com wxjmfauth at gmail.com
Thu Jan 9 03:31:55 EST 2014


Le mercredi 8 janvier 2014 20:00:02 UTC+1, Bischoop a écrit :
> Walter Hurry wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> > On Mon, 30 Dec 2013 18:38:20 +0000, Bischoop wrote:
> 
> > 
> 
> >> I have a txt file with some words, and need simply program that will
> 
> >> print me words containing provided letters.
> 
> >> 
> 
> >> For example:
> 
> >> Type the letters:
> 
> >>  (I type: g,m,o)
> 
> >> open the dictionary.txt
> 
> >> check words containing:g,m,o in dictionary.txt
> 
> >> if there are words containing: ["g", "m", "o" ]
> 
> >> print words with g,m,o
> 
> > 
> 
> > Well, what have you tried so far, and what result did you get?
> 
> > 
> 
> > The incredibly helpful people here will provide advice, guidance and
> 
> > pointers, but it won't help you at all if they just do your homework for
> 
> > you.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Honestly Im newbie in Python, years ago (10 already) I wrote simply program 
> 
> something like a TEST: Capitals of Countries. You could learn the capitals 
> 
> of some countries, and then you could try to solve a test. I know it's seems 
> 
> so simply for you guys but I was quite pride of myself :-) 
> 
> 
> 
> Now because of free time I took my book which I used years ago about python 
> 
> and try to learn it again, and as motivation I try to write the program I 
> 
> described above just to give me a kick :-), however got no idea how to start 
> 
> it, I meand there is so many moduls (import this, import that), I know how 
> 
> to open, read file etc. Just stuck with that, got no clue what and how use 
> 
> this that what I need to seek the words from the files if I need a words 
> 
> with letters I want.

>>> # a starting point
>>> lettres = set('üœŸ')
>>> Wörter = ['abcüœŸb', 'aüꜟ', 'üœŸzzz', 'üœzz', 'Strauẞ', '', 'nul']
>>> for word in Wörter:
...     tmp = set(word)
...     print('{:10} : {}'.format(word, lettres.issubset(tmp)))
...     
abcüœŸb    : True
aüꜟ      : True
üœŸzzz     : True
üœzz       : False
Strauẞ     : False
           : False
nul        : False
>>>




More information about the Python-list mailing list