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    Python - Membership Operators


    Python Membership Operators

    The membership operators in Python help us determine whether an item is present in a given container type object, or in other words, whether an item is a member of the given container type object.

    Types of Python Membership Operators

    Python has two membership operators: in and not in. Both return a Boolean result. The result of in operator is opposite to that of not in operator.

    The 'in' Operator

    The "in" operator is used to check whether a substring is present in a bigger string, any item is present in a list or tuple, or a sub-list or sub-tuple is included in a list or tuple.

    Example of Python Membership "in" Operator

    In the following example, different substrings are checked whether they belong to the string var="TutorialsPoint". Python differentiates characters on the basis of their Unicode value. Hence "To" is not the same as "to". Also note that if the "in" operator returns True, the "not in" operator evaluates to False.

    var = "TutorialsPoint"
    a = "P"
    b = "tor"
    c = "in"
    d = "To"
    print (a, "in", var, ":", a in var)
    print (b, "in", var, ":", b in var)
    print (c, "in", var, ":", c in var)
    print (d, "in", var, ":", d in var)
    

    It will produce the following output

    P in TutorialsPoint : True
    tor in TutorialsPoint : True
    in in TutorialsPoint : True
    To in TutorialsPoint : False
    

    The 'not in' Operator

    The "not in" operator is used to check a sequence with the given value is not present in the object like string, list, tuple, etc.

    Example of Python Membership "not in" Operator

    var = "TutorialsPoint"
    a = "P"
    b = "tor"
    c = "in"
    d = "To"
    print (a, "not in", var, ":", a not in var)
    print (b, "not in", var, ":", b not in var)
    print (c, "not in", var, ":", c not in var)
    print (d, "not in", var, ":", d not in var)
    

    It will produce the following output

    P not in TutorialsPoint : False
    tor not in TutorialsPoint : False
    in not in TutorialsPoint : False
    To not in TutorialsPoint : True
    

    Membership Operator with Lists and Tuples

    You can use the "in/not in" operator to check the membership of an item in the list or tuple.

    var = [10,20,30,40]
    a = 20
    b = 10
    c = a-b
    d = a/2
    print (a, "in", var, ":", a in var)
    print (b, "not in", var, ":", b not in var)
    print (c, "in", var, ":", c in var)
    print (d, "not in", var, ":", d not in var)
    

    It will produce the following output

    20 in [10, 20, 30, 40] : True
    10 not in [10, 20, 30, 40] : False
    10 in [10, 20, 30, 40] : True
    10.0 not in [10, 20, 30, 40] : False
    

    In the last case, "d" is a float but still it compares to True with 10 (an int) in the list. Even if a number expressed in other formats like binary, octal or hexadecimal are given the membership operators tell if it is inside the sequence.

    >>>  0x14 in [10, 20, 30, 40]
    True
    

    Example

    However, if you try to check if two successive numbers are present in a list or tuple, the in operator returns False. If the list/tuple contains the successive numbers as a sequence itself, then it returns True.

    var = (10,20,30,40)
    a = 10
    b = 20
    print ((a,b), "in", var, ":", (a,b) in var)
    var = ((10,20),30,40)
    a = 10
    b = 20
    print ((a,b), "in", var, ":", (a,b) in var)
    

    It will produce the following output

    (10, 20) in (10, 20, 30, 40) : False
    (10, 20) in ((10, 20), 30, 40) : True
    

    Membership Operator with Sets

    Python's membership operators also work well with the set objects.

    var = {10,20,30,40}
    a = 10
    b = 20
    print (b, "in", var, ":", b in var)
    var = {(10,20),30,40}
    a = 10
    b = 20
    print ((a,b), "in", var, ":", (a,b) in var)
    

    It will produce the following output

    20 in {40, 10, 20, 30} : True
    (10, 20) in {40, 30, (10, 20)} : True
    

    Membership Operator with Dictionaries

    Use of in as well as not in operators with dictionary object is allowed. However, Python checks the membership only with the collection of keys and not values.

    var = {1:10, 2:20, 3:30}
    a = 2
    b = 20
    print (a, "in", var, ":", a in var)
    print (b, "in", var, ":", b in var)
    

    It will produce the following output

    2 in {1: 10, 2: 20, 3: 30} : True
    20 in {1: 10, 2: 20, 3: 30} : False