I have read the documentation but don't fully understand how to do it.
I understand 开发者_如何学JAVAthat I need to have some kind of identifier in the string so that the functions can find where to split the string (unless I can target the first space in the sentence?).
So for example how would I split:
"Sico87 is an awful python developer"
to "Sico87"
and "is an awful Python developer"
?
The strings are retrieved from a database (if this does matter).
Use the split
method on strings:
>>> "Sico87 is an awful python developer".split(' ', 1)
['Sico87', 'is an awful python developer']
How it works:
- Every string is an object. String objects have certain methods defined on them, such as
split
in this case. You call them usingobj.<methodname>(<arguments>)
. - The first argument to
split
is the character that separates the individual substrings. In this case that is a space,' '
. The second argument is the number of times the split should be performed. In your case that is
1
. Leaving out this second argument applies the split as often as possible:>>> "Sico87 is an awful python developer".split(' ') ['Sico87', 'is', 'an', 'awful', 'python', 'developer']
Of course you can also store the substrings in separate variables instead of a list:
>>> a, b = "Sico87 is an awful python developer".split(' ', 1)
>>> a
'Sico87'
>>> b
'is an awful python developer'
But do note that this will cause trouble if certain inputs do not contain spaces:
>>> a, b = "string_without_spaces".split(' ', 1)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ValueError: need more than 1 value to unpack
Use partition(' ')
which always returns three items in the tuple - the first bit up until the separator, the separator, and then the bits after. Slots in the tuple that have are not applicable are still there, just set to be empty strings.
Examples:
"Sico87 is an awful python developer".partition(' ')
returns ["Sico87"," ","is an awful python developer"]
"Sico87 is an awful python developer".partition(' ')[0]
returns "Sico87"
An alternative, trickier way is to use split(' ',1)
which works similiarly but returns a variable number of items. It will return a tuple of one or two items, the first item being the first word up until the delimiter and the second being the rest of the string (if there is any).
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