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Split by comma and strip whitespace in Python

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-01-23 04:36 出处:网络
I have some python code that splits on comma, but doesn\'t strip the whitespace: >>> string = \"blah, lots,of ,spaces, here \"

I have some python code that splits on comma, but doesn't strip the whitespace:

>>> string = "blah, lots  ,  of ,  spaces, here "
>>> mylist = string.split(',')
>>> print mylist
['blah', ' lots  ', '  of ', '  spaces', ' here ']

I would rather end up with whitespace removed like this:

['blah', 'lots', 'of', 'spaces', 'here']

I am aware that I could loop through the list开发者_开发百科 and strip() each item but, as this is Python, I'm guessing there's a quicker, easier and more elegant way of doing it.


Use list comprehension -- simpler, and just as easy to read as a for loop.

my_string = "blah, lots  ,  of ,  spaces, here "
result = [x.strip() for x in my_string.split(',')]
# result is ["blah", "lots", "of", "spaces", "here"]

See: Python docs on List Comprehension
A good 2 second explanation of list comprehension.


I came to add:

map(str.strip, string.split(','))

but saw it had already been mentioned by Jason Orendorff in a comment.

Reading Glenn Maynard's comment on the same answer suggesting list comprehensions over map I started to wonder why. I assumed he meant for performance reasons, but of course he might have meant for stylistic reasons, or something else (Glenn?).

So a quick (possibly flawed?) test on my box (Python 2.6.5 on Ubuntu 10.04) applying the three methods in a loop revealed:

$ time ./list_comprehension.py  # [word.strip() for word in string.split(',')]
real    0m22.876s

$ time ./map_with_lambda.py     # map(lambda s: s.strip(), string.split(','))
real    0m25.736s

$ time ./map_with_str.strip.py  # map(str.strip, string.split(','))
real    0m19.428s

making map(str.strip, string.split(',')) the winner, although it seems they are all in the same ballpark.

Certainly though map (with or without a lambda) should not necessarily be ruled out for performance reasons, and for me it is at least as clear as a list comprehension.


Split using a regular expression. Note I made the case more general with leading spaces. The list comprehension is to remove the null strings at the front and back.

>>> import re
>>> string = "  blah, lots  ,  of ,  spaces, here "
>>> pattern = re.compile("^\s+|\s*,\s*|\s+$")
>>> print([x for x in pattern.split(string) if x])
['blah', 'lots', 'of', 'spaces', 'here']

This works even if ^\s+ doesn't match:

>>> string = "foo,   bar  "
>>> print([x for x in pattern.split(string) if x])
['foo', 'bar']
>>>

Here's why you need ^\s+:

>>> pattern = re.compile("\s*,\s*|\s+$")
>>> print([x for x in pattern.split(string) if x])
['  blah', 'lots', 'of', 'spaces', 'here']

See the leading spaces in blah?

Clarification: above uses the Python 3 interpreter, but results are the same in Python 2.


Just remove the white space from the string before you split it.

mylist = my_string.replace(' ','').split(',')


I know this has already been answered, but if you end doing this a lot, regular expressions may be a better way to go:

>>> import re
>>> re.sub(r'\s', '', string).split(',')
['blah', 'lots', 'of', 'spaces', 'here']

The \s matches any whitespace character, and we just replace it with an empty string ''. You can find more info here: http://docs.python.org/library/re.html#re.sub


map(lambda s: s.strip(), mylist) would be a little better than explicitly looping. Or for the whole thing at once: map(lambda s:s.strip(), string.split(','))


import re
result=[x for x in re.split(',| ',your_string) if x!='']

this works fine for me.


re (as in regular expressions) allows splitting on multiple characters at once:

$ string = "blah, lots  ,  of ,  spaces, here "
$ re.split(', ',string)
['blah', 'lots  ', ' of ', ' spaces', 'here ']

This doesn't work well for your example string, but works nicely for a comma-space separated list. For your example string, you can combine the re.split power to split on regex patterns to get a "split-on-this-or-that" effect.

$ re.split('[, ]',string)
['blah',
 '',
 'lots',
 '',
 '',
 '',
 '',
 'of',
 '',
 '',
 '',
 'spaces',
 '',
 'here',
 '']

Unfortunately, that's ugly, but a filter will do the trick:

$ filter(None, re.split('[, ]',string))
['blah', 'lots', 'of', 'spaces', 'here']

Voila!


s = 'bla, buu, jii'

sp = []
sp = s.split(',')
for st in sp:
    print st


import re
mylist = [x for x in re.compile('\s*[,|\s+]\s*').split(string)]

Simply, comma or at least one white spaces with/without preceding/succeeding white spaces.

Please try!

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