I got a function online to help me with my current project and it had semicolons on some of the lines. I was wondering why? Is it to break the function?
def containsAny(self, strings=[]):
alphabet = 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789'
for string in strings:
for char in string:
if char in alphabet: return 1;
return 0;
The function I got online with little modification:
for string in strings:
for char in string:
if char in alphabet: return 1;
Is the above saying the following?
if char in alphabet:
return 1
break
The semicolon does nothing in the code you show.
I suspect this is someone who programs in another language (C, Java, ...) that requires semicolons at the end of statements and it's just a habit (happens to me sometimes too).
If you want to put several Python statements on the same line, you can use a semi-colon to separate them, see this Python Doc:
A suite is a group of statements controlled by a clause. A suite can be one or more semicolon-separated simple statements on the same line as the header, following the header’s colon, or it can be one or more indented statements on subsequent lines