I have this code in Python
inputted = input("Enter in something: ")
print("Input is {0}, including the return".format(inputted))
that outp开发者_JAVA百科uts
Enter in something: something
Input is something
, including the return
I am not sure what is happening; if I use variables that don't depend on user input, I do not get the newline after formatting with the variable. I suspect Python might be taking in the newline as input when I hit return.
How can I make it so that the input does not include any newlines so that I may compare it to other strings/characters? (e.g. something == 'a'
)
You are correct - a newline is included in inputted
. To remove it, you can just call strip("\r\n")
to remove the newline from the end:
print("Input is {0}, including the return".format(inputted.strip("\r\n")))
This won't cause any issues if inputted
does not have a newline at the end, but will remove any that are there, so you can use this whether inputted
is user input or not.
If you don't want any newlines in the text at all, you can use inputted.replace("\r\n", "")
to remove all newlines.
Your problem is actually Eclipse. Assuming that you use PyDev, I was able to reproduce the problem. When entering something in the Eclipse console, the problem occurs as described in your question. But when directly executing the very same script with the Python 3.1.1 interpreter, inputted
does not include a newline character.
I investigated the Python source code and found out input()
uses GNU readline if stdin is interactive (i.e. a TTY or prompt, however you want to call it), but falls back to the .readline()
method of the stdin object if necessary. Then, if the result of readline
ends with \n
, that character is removed. Note: No CR-LF or LF-CR handling here (in the fallback case)!
So I wrote this little script to see what actually happens:
import sys
from io import StringIO
for stdin in [sys.stdin, StringIO("test\r\ntest\r\n")]:
sys.stdin = stdin
print("readline returns this: " + repr(sys.stdin.readline()))
inputted = input("Enter in something: ")
print("inputted: " + repr(inputted))
print("inputted is printed like this: --> {0} <--".format(inputted))
It first executes the code with the normal stdin (console or Eclipse console) and then with a prepared stdin containing the text test\r\ntest\r\n
.
Try and run the script in Eclipse - you must enter a string twice. The conclusion: Pressing Enter in the Eclipse console will produce CR-LF ("\r\n"). Printing "\r" in the Eclipse console will jump to the next line.
On the other side, running it in the Windows console will produce the expected output: input()
returns a string without a newline at the end because (I guess) GNU readline is used. With the prepared stdin StringIO("test\r\n")
, the input()
result is "test\r" as in Eclipse (although not printed as newline).
Hope this all makes sense... but what I still don't know is if that is expected behavior of Eclipse.
If you only want to stript the last line endings, you could use rstrip.
inputted.rstrip ("\r\n")
inputted = inputted.strip()
Edit: As noted, this will kill all whitespace at the start and end. A way to get rid of only the trailing newline is:
import re
inputted = re.sub("[\n\r]+$", "", inputted)
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