Jerry Daniels wrote:
I have to agree with Sarah. I often want to see if a string doesn't contain another string.

While there is a mysterious absence of "does not contain" to complimenty "contains", you can use "is not in" and "is in" for the same purposes.

Meanwhile, even English has its glaring absences, like having no singular third-party gender-independent pronoun, leaving us to invent works like "s/he" or awkwardly using the plural "they" instead.

--
 Richard Gaskin
 Managing Editor, revJournal
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