This content originally appeared on flaviocopes.com and was authored by flaviocopes.com
A string in Python is a series of characters enclosed into quotes or double quotes:
"Roger"
'Roger'You can assign a string value to a variable:
name = "Roger"You can concatenate two strings using the + operator:
phrase = "Roger" + " is a good dog"You can append to a string using +=:
name = "Roger"
name += " is a good dog"
print(name) #Roger is a good dogYou can convert a number to a string using the str class constructor:
str(8) #"8"This is essential to concatenate a number to a string:
print("Roger is " + str(8) + " years old") #Roger is 8 years oldA string can be multi-line when defined with a special syntax, enclosing the string in a set of 3 quotes:
print("""Roger is
8
years old
""")
#double quotes, or single quotes
print('''
Roger is
8
years old
''')A string has a set of built-in methods, like:
isalpha()to check if a string contains only characters and it’s not emptyisalnum()to check if a string contains characters or digits and it’s not emptyisdecimal()to check if a string contains digits and it’s not emptylower()to get a lowercase version of a stringislower()to check if a string is lowercaseupper()to get an uppercase version of a stringisupper()to check if a string is uppercasetitle()to get a capitalized version of a stringstartsswith()to check if the string starts with a specific substringendswith()to check if the string ends with a specific substringreplace()to replace a part of a stringsplit()to split a string on a specific character separatorstrip()to trim the whitespace from a stringjoin()to append new letters to a stringfind()to find the position of a substring
and many more.
None of those methods alter the original string. They return a new, modified string instead. For example:
name = "Roger"
print(name.lower()) #"roger"
print(name) #"Roger"You can use some global functions to work with strings, too.
In particular I think of len(), which gives you the length of a string:
name = "Roger"
print(len(name)) #5The in operator lets you check if a string contains a substring:
name = "Roger"
print("ger" in name) #TrueEscaping is a way to add special characters into a string.
For example, how do you add a double quote into a string that’s wrapped into double quotes?
name = "Roger""Ro"Ger" will not work, as Python will think the string ends at "Ro".
The way to go is to escape the double quote inside the string, with the \ backslash character:
name = "Ro\"ger"This applies to single quotes too \', and for special formatting characters like \t for tab, \n for new line and \\ for the backslash.
Given a string, you can get its characters using square brackets to get a specific item, given its index, starting from 0:
name = "Roger"
name[0] #'R'
name[1] #'o'
name[2] #'g'Using a negative number will start counting from the end:
name = "Roger"
name[-1] #"r"You can also use a range, using what we call slicing:
name = "Roger"
name[0:2] #"Ro"
name[:2] #"Ro"
name[2:] #"ger"
This content originally appeared on flaviocopes.com and was authored by flaviocopes.com
flaviocopes.com | Sciencx (2020-12-03T05:00:00+00:00) Python Strings. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2020/12/03/python-strings/
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