14

I am trying to write a program that accepts two strings from the user:

s1 = input("Please enter a word:")
s2 = input("Please enter another word:")

How can I output True if the two are anagrams and False otherwise?


If you found this question from a search engine and want to look for possibly multiple anagrams within a list: it is possible, but not optimal to compare each pair of elements. Please see Using Python, find anagrams for a list of words for more specific advice.

Karl Knechtel
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Kyle
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  • It's mostly about algorithms, not specific languages. And I'm not sure we provide full solutions to such questions here if you don't have anything to start with. – wRAR Feb 20 '13 at 22:01

27 Answers27

46

Why not just sort the strings?

>>> sorted('anagram')
['a', 'a', 'a', 'g', 'm', 'n', 'r']
>>> sorted('nagaram')
['a', 'a', 'a', 'g', 'm', 'n', 'r']
>>> sorted('anagram') == sorted('nagaram')
True
Robᵩ
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Blender
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18

You can use the magic Counter from collections library. From documentation:

It is an unordered collection where elements are stored as dictionary keys and their counts are stored as dictionary values

So, you can initialize a Counter object with a string (a iterable) and compare with another Counter from a string

from collections import Counter

def is_anagram(str1, str2):
   return Counter(str1) == Counter(str2)
lborgav
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    I like this solution better than using `sorted` since it's clearer what's actually being done here – Raniz Oct 20 '16 at 06:30
5

You need to think through your conditional logic a bit more. The loop is on the right track, but if there is a letter in s1 that is NOT in s2, you should break out of this loop and print the "False" statement. Consider using a variable like all_s1_in_s2 = True and then setting that to false if you find a letter that doesn't match.

Some other tips:

  • for l in s1 will loop through string s1 giving you access to each letter in sequence as l - you don't need range or len at all

  • The if .. in statement can help test whether a letter exists in a string, e.g. if letter in mystring: is a valid statement and this could help you a lot, again not needing range or len

  • You should avoid using numbers in variable names where possible - better would be word_one and word_two, as an example

John Lyon
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3

To check if two strings are anagrams of each other using dictionaries: Note : Even Number, special characters can be used as an input

def anagram(s):
    string_list = []
    for ch in s.lower():
        string_list.append(ch)

    string_dict = {}
    for ch in string_list:
        if ch not in string_dict:
            string_dict[ch] = 1
        else:
            string_dict[ch] = string_dict[ch] + 1

    return string_dict



s1 = "master"
s2 = "stream"

a = anagram(s1)
b = anagram(s2)

if a == b:
    print "Anagram"
else:
    print "Not Anagram"
Tshilidzi Mudau
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kumar22
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3
def is_anagram(w1, w2):
    w1, w2 = list(w1.upper()), list(w2.upper())
    w2.sort()
    w1.sort()
    return w1 == w2
Michael Yousrie
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1
>>> s1 = 'vivid'
>>> s2 = 'dvivi'
>>> s3 = 'vivid'
>>> def is_anagram(s1, s2):
...     if s1.lower() == s2.lower():
...         return False
...     return sorted(s1.lower()) == sorted(s2.lower())
...
>>> is_anagram(s1, s2)
True
>>> is_anagram(s1, s3)
False
>>> s2 = 'dvivii'
>>> is_anagram(s1, s2)
False
>>> s2 = 'evivi'
>>> is_anagram(s1, s2)
False
>>> 
BUSY
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Shan Valleru
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  • for the `isAnagram` function, you could just return the evaluated expression i.e `return sorted(s..) == sorted(s2)` – tr33hous Sep 24 '14 at 14:37
1

    #An anagram is the result of rearranging the letters of a word to produce a new word. Anagrams are case insensitive
    #Examples:
    # foefet is an anagram of toffee
    # Buckethead is an anagram of DeathCubeK

    # The shortest my function style *************************************** 
    def is_anagram1(test, original):
        """Сhecks 'test' is anagram of 'original' strings based on:
        1. length of the both string and length of the sets made from the strings is equivalent
        2. then checks equivalents of sorted lists created from test and original strings

        >>> is_anagram1('Same','same')
        False
        >>> is_anagram1('toffee','foeftt')
        False
        >>> is_anagram1('foefet','toffee')
        True
        >>> is_anagram1("Buuckk",'kkkcuB')
        False
        >>> is_anagram1('Buckethead','DeathCubeK')
        True
        >>> is_anagram1('DeathCubeK','Buckethead')
        True
        """
        # check the length of the both string
        if len(test) != len(original):
            return False

        # check is the strings are the same
        t,o = test.lower(), original.lower()
        if t == o:
            return False

        # check the sorted lists
        return sorted(t) == sorted(o)


    # The final my one line code **************************************
    def is_anagram(test, original):
        """Сhecks 'test' is anagram of 'original' in one line of code

        >>> is_anagram('Same','same')
        False
        >>> is_anagram('toffee','foeftt')
        False
        >>> is_anagram('foefet','toffee')
        True
        >>> is_anagram("Buuckk",'kkkcuB')
        False
        >>> is_anagram('Buckethead','DeathCubeK')
        True
        >>> is_anagram('DeathCubeK','Buckethead')
        True
        """
        return False if len(test) != len(original) or test.lower() == original.lower() else sorted(test.lower()) == sorted(original.lower())

    if __name__ == "__main__":
        import doctest
        doctest.testmod(verbose=True)


### 2 items passed all tests:
### 6 tests in __main__.is_anagram
### 6 tests in __main__.is_anagram1
### 12 tests in 3 items.
### 12 passed and 0 failed.
### Test passed
1

You could use the following code it will not count special characters nor it will count digits and will return "they are anagrams" if the total characters have occurred equally in both strings hence will tell the the strings are anagrams or not .

text = input('Enter a string: ')
text1 = input('Enter a string: ')
text,text1 = text.lower(),text1.lower()
count = 0
count1=0
for i in range(97,123):
    if chr(i) in text and chr(i) in text1:
    count1+=1
        if text.count(chr(i)) == text1.count(chr(i)):
             count +=1
if len(text) >= len(text1):
    num1 = len(text)
else:
    num1 = len(text1)
if count == count1:
    print("they are anagrams")
else :
    print("they are not anagrams")
Muhammad Abdullah
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1

Here's a solution if you are adamant on using Python dictionary and you can't use functional programming:

Create a dictionary using comprehension and compare the dictionaries of the two word with a simple == operator.

def isanagram2(wrd1, wrd2):

    wrd1_dict = {k: 0 for k in wrd1}
    wrd2_dict = {k: 0 for k in wrd2}

    for c1, c2 in zip(wrd1, wrd2):
        wrd1_dict[c1] += 1
        wrd2_dict[c2] += 1

    if wrd1_dict == wrd2_dict:
        return True
    return False
Billal Begueradj
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daniel lee
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1

I think we can get this like this


s1 = "listen"
s2 = "silent"
s1=list(s1);s1.sort()
s2 = list(s2);s2.sort()
if s1 == s2:
   print ("Given Strings are Anagram")
else:
   print ("Given String are not anagrams")

1

Not sure if it was proposed up there, but I went with:

def is_anagram(a, b):
    return sorted(a.lower()) == sorted(b.lower())
Aaron A.
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0

Just a thought:

def check_(arg):
        mark = hash(str(set(sorted(arg))))
        return mark

def ana(s1, s2):
        if check_(s1) != check_(s2):
                pass
        elif len(s1) != len(s2):
                pass
        else:
             print("{0} could be anagram of  {1}".format(s1, s2))
Schopenhauer
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0

This worked for me

str1="abcd"
str2="bcad"
word1=[]
word2=[]
for x in range(len(str1)):
    word1.append(str1[x])
for x in range(len(str2)):
    word2.append(str2[x])
if(len(word1)==len(word2)):
    for letter in word1:
        if letter in word2:
            word2.remove(letter)

if len(word2)==0:
    print "anagram"
else:
    print "not anagram"
Krzysztof Kosiński
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Cybernix
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0

Simplest shortest solution

def anagram(word1, word2):
    return sorted(word1) == sorted(word2)

check

print(anagram("xyz","zyx"))
>>True

print(anagram("xyz","zyy"))
>>False
o-az
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    This has already [been suggested](https://stackoverflow.com/a/14990938/8881141) in 2013. – Mr. T Dec 06 '18 at 21:43
0

Here's one typical assignment solution:

def anagram(s1, s2):
""" (str, str) -> bool

Return True if s1 and s2 are anagrams

>>> anagram(s1, s2)
True
"""
    s1 = s1.replace(" ", "")
    s2 = s2.replace(" ", "")

    s1_new = list(s1)
    s2_new = list(s2)

    if len(s1_new) == len(s2_new):
        dupe_found = True
        while dupe_found:
            dupe_found = False
            for i in s1_new:
                for j in s2_new:
                    if i == j:
                        s1_new.remove(i)
                        s2_new.remove(j)
                        dupe_found = True
                        break
                break
    return s1_new == s2_new
Bikramjeet Singh
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0
def anagram(a,b):
x=[]
y=[]
for i in a:
    if i!=' ': # This will ignore the spaces in the sentence
        x+=[i] # Adds only letters into a list and ignore the spaces
for i in b:
    if i!=' ':
        y+=[i]
if len(x)==len(y): # if length of two lists are not same, They are not anagrams anyway. So it directly returns False.
    for i in range(len(x)):
        for j in range(len(y)):
            if x[i].lower()==y[j].lower(): 
                y.pop(j) # If the letter matched between first and second list, that letter is poped from that list.
                break
    return len(y)==0 # If the given sentences are anagrams, all the letters are poped out from the second list and function returns True(as the lenght of the second list is 0. If not, function will return False.
return False

anagram(a,b)

  • Just a quick note. This code actually returns True only if both group of words are present in each other. It also returns False if there is any extra letter in a group. – Megha Shyam Jun 26 '20 at 12:47
0

Java Code for Anagram

static void anagram(String s1,String s2){
    if(s1.length()!=s2.length()){
        System.out.println("not anagram");
        return;
    }
    else{
        int []arr=new int[256];

        int size=s1.length();
        for(int i=0;i<size;i++){
            arr[s1.charAt(i)]++;
            arr[s2.charAt(i)]--;
        }
        for(int i=0;i<256;i++){
            if(arr[i]!=0){
                System.out.println("not anagram");
                return;
                }
        }
        System.out.println("anagram");
    }
    
}
Prince
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0

Here a solution using dict comprehension.

def is_anagram(s1, s2):
    return {c:s1.count(c) for c in s1} == {c:s2.count(c) for c in s2}
Red Cricket
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0
class Solution(object):
    def isAnagram(self, s, t):
        
        s_dict = {}
        t_dict = {}
        
        if len(s) != len(t):
            return False
        else:
            for i in range(0, len(s)):
                if s[i] in s_dict:
                    s_dict[s[i]] +=1
                else:
                    s_dict[s[i]] = 1
                
                if t[i] in t_dict:
                    t_dict[t[i]] +=1
                else:
                    t_dict[t[i]] = 1
        
        
        return s_dict == t_dict
Daniel Walker
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-1

Anagrams are the two different words formed with same characters: For eg: EAT and TEA likewise there can be numerous examples.

One good way to see if give two words or sentences are anagrams is to set a counter array of size 256, and initially set all the values to 0. (This can be a good option if the input is bigger, at least than a few words) Now start reading the first string(word or a sentence), and increment its corresponding ASCII location in the array by one. Repeat this for the complete string. Now start reading the second string and keep decreasing the corresponding ASCII counter of each letter in the array. Finally, parse the array; if all the values are zero then the inputs were anagrams otherwise not. Following is the commented code for the better understanding.

#include<iostream>
#include<string>

using namespace std;

bool is_anagram(string s1, string s2)
{
    //Following statement chechs the base condition; if either of the strings is empty,                                  
    //return False
    if(s1.length() == 0 || s2.length() == 0)
        return false;

    //initializing the counter array and setting it's values to 0
    int counter[256] = {0};

    //Calculating the lengths of both the strings
    int len1 = s1.length();
    int len2 = s2.length();

    //Following is also a base condition that checks whether the strings are equal in 
    //length, if not we return False
    if(len1 != len2)
        return false;

    //Following for loop increments the values of the counter array for the first  
    //string
    for(int i = 0; i < len1; i++)
    {
        counter[s1[i]]++;
    }

    //This for loop decrements the values of the counter array for the second string
    for(int i = 0; i < len2; i--)
    {
        counter[s2[i]]--;
    }
    //Now we check whether the counter array is empty/(or as it was initialized); if               
    //yes then the two strings are anagrams
    for(int i = 0; i < 256; i++)
    {
        if(counter[i] != 0)
            return false;
    }

    return true;
}
venkatvb
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ProB
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  • I guess the first If should be `if(s1.length() == 0 || s2.length() == 0)`. As you cannot compare string with integer. – venkatvb Sep 29 '15 at 19:22
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    The question is tagged with *python*, this looks a lot like c++ to me – Raniz Oct 20 '16 at 06:28
-1

Return True answers the question "Is w2 an anagram of a subsequence of w1"

Explanation: In the code below, we can answer two questions: 1) whether or not two strings are anagrams,2) If w2 is an anagram of a sub-sequence of w1. We use O(1) space (constant) and O(n) time. The dictionary d0 can be expanded to include any characters and we remain within O(1) space bound.

def anagrams(w1,w2):
       d0={chr(i):0 for i in range(ord('a'),ord('z'))}
       for char in w1:
           d0[char]+=1
       for char in w2:
           if d0[char]==0:
               return False
           else:
               d0[char]-=1
    return sum([d0[x] for x in d0])==0 #return True (for subseqence anagram)
J.Michael
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  • Although your code snippet might solve the issue, you should describe what’s the purpose of your code (how it solves the problem). Furthermore, you might want to check https://stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-answer – Ahmad F Mar 12 '18 at 14:19
  • Thanks for the comment: Anagrams is a very interesting problem from time and space complexity point: Sorting at best is O(n*log(n)) time. A better O(n) time and O(1) space is given by others above and also here. I added this for two reasons: (1.) It is easy to include all characters. (Just expand the span "ord('a'), ord('z') " to a wider range (remains O(1) space) and (2.) last line of code can be "return True" if we just want substring anagrams. (It was asked above, and I found no one answered it). sum=0 assure equality of w1 and w2 . – J.Michael Mar 12 '18 at 15:29
  • He meant in the answer. Your answer got flagged because it is "code only" and the automated systems will continue to flag it as it is still "code only" – MatthewMartin Mar 12 '18 at 17:33
  • Thanks Matthew, I included "Summary" is that what is needed? Though I do not see the "summary" yet. – J.Michael Mar 13 '18 at 20:29
  • Ahmad and Mathew, thanks for your remarks. I added a long header as a description, but the flag is still -1. What is going on? Can you help please? – J.Michael Mar 18 '18 at 13:56
-1

This case we check using two containers for each sorted string.

def anagram(s1, s2):
    str1 = ''
    str2 = ''

    for i in s1:
      str1 += i

    for j in s2:
      str2 += j

    if str1 == str2:
      return True

    return False
Israel Manzo
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-1
str1='ohaha'
str2='hahao1'
set3=set(str1)
set4=set(str2)
if(len(set3.difference(set4))==0 and len(set4.difference(set3))==0):
     print('anagrams')
else:
     print('not anagrams')
Beniamin H
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Sai Sudha
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    Hello to SO @Sai Sudha! Your answer looks correct, but please provide some context/explanation to your code. Also please tell us what language did you used. If it's Python you don't need parenthesis in your `if` condition. Moreover you don't need to check the difference length explicitly. `bool(set3 - set4)` or `not not (set3 - set4)` should work for you. – Beniamin H Nov 10 '19 at 21:04
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    If you're going to answer a 6 year old question that already has 20 answers, it would be a good idea to introduce your answer and not just supply code. In this case, however, your answer does't work as it doesn't take into account how many of each character there are. Just using sets in this way your code says that `hahao` and `ohahahahahahahahaha` are anagrams, which they are not. – David Buck Nov 10 '19 at 21:04
-2

Just another solution without using sort:

s1 = "aaabbbccc"
s2 = "abcabcabc"

def are_anagram1(s1, s2):
   return [False, True][sum([ord(x) for x in s1]) == sum([ord(x) for x in s2])]

print are_anagram1(s1,s2)

NB: this works only for alphabet not numerals

James Sapam
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-2

I think the shortest way can be:

fstr=input("enter first string:")
sstr=input("enter second string:")

if(fstr==sstr[::-1]):
    print("it's anagram")
Amrit
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-2
def areAnagram(s1,s2):
    if len(s1) != len(s2):
        return False
    count = [0]*256
    for i in range(len(s1)):
        count[ord(s1[i])] += 1
        count[ord(s2[i])] -= 1
                       
    for x in count:
        if x != 0: 
            return False
    return True

a = input("Enter a string:")
b = input("Enter b string: ")

print(areAnagram(a,b))
Suraj Rao
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    While this code may solve the question, [including an explanation](//meta.stackexchange.com/q/114762) of how and why this solves the problem would really help to improve the quality of your post, and probably result in more up-votes. Remember that you are answering the question for readers in the future, not just the person asking now. Please [edit] your answer to add explanations and give an indication of what limitations and assumptions apply. – Suraj Rao Jun 23 '21 at 12:01
-2

Solution:

print('Strings are anagrams' if sorted(input("Enter 1st string: "))== sorted(input("Enter 2nd string: ")) else 'Strings are not anagrams')
  • Welcome to Stack Overflow! Please make sure that your solution was not already proposed in the [one](https://stackoverflow.com/a/14990938/6682517) [of](https://stackoverflow.com/a/40146840/6682517) [the](https://stackoverflow.com/a/54878504/6682517) [other](https://stackoverflow.com/a/64175507/6682517) [answers](https://stackoverflow.com/a/53659699/6682517) before posting it. – Sergey Shubin Aug 17 '21 at 11:44
  • @SergeyShubin I wrote the Optimized code of the code given here. To show how I optimized it I wrote the code which is not Copied. But then I also made the changes now it's the code that doesn't match any of the code here!! – Rohan Gupta Aug 18 '21 at 19:46
  • You may explain in your answer why is it better than others: it is highly encouraged to comment solutions for other visitors for better understanding. Does it run faster? Or consume less memory? Or more stable (works in some border cases that other algorithms process incorrect)? – Sergey Shubin Aug 19 '21 at 07:11