On May 16, 2:57 pm, CM <cmpyt...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > I need help with getting the useful information how do I get the place > > > if I don't now how long the string is? > > > And is it supposed to handle > > > for london give the weather to me > > for the london weather give me > > > ... > > > Do a search on "natural language processing"... You are at the level > > of algorithms, and algorithms are not limited to Python... > > Yes, this is a major field of research. For basic purposes in Python, > maybe just try to trigger off the presence of the word "weather" and > the presence of a particular city's name. It will not work if the > user tries to trick it ("Don't give me the weather in London"), but, > like a search engine, it will more or less give what people want for > common queries. Like: > > list_of_cities = ['london', 'moscow', 'new york', 'paris'] > user_string = 'Give me the weather for London please.' > user_word_list = user_string.split() #if they put a comma after city, > this will be a problem > for word in user_word_list: > period_free_word = word.rstrip('.') #strips trailing period for > final word, in case there > lowered_word = period_free_word.lower() #makes it case > insensitive > if lowered_word in list_of_cities: > print 'The city is: ' + lowered_word > DoSomething(lowered_word) #go and get the weather data for > that city I guess > > Che
I forgot to split on two delimiters (a space and a comma). See here: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/tutor/2008-August/063570.html Anyway, you get the idea... -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list