I was wondering if there is a way to print elements without newlines such as
x=['.','.','.','.','.','.']
for i in x:
print i
and that would print ........
instead of what would normally print which would be
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Thanks!
This can be easily done with the print() function with Python 3.
for i in x:
print(i, end="") # substitute the null-string in place of newline
will give you
......
In Python v2 you can use the print()
function by including:
from __future__ import print_function
as the first statement in your source file.
As the print() docs state:
Old: print x, # Trailing comma suppresses newline
New: print(x, end=" ") # Appends a space instead of a newline
Note, this is similar to a recent question I answered ( https://stackoverflow.com/a/12102758/1209279 ) that contains some additional information about the print()
function if you are curious.
I surprised no one has mentioned the pre-Python3 method for suppressing the newline: a trailing comma.
for i in x:
print i,
print # For a single newline to end the line
This does insert spaces before certain characters, as is explained here.
As mentioned in the other answers, you can either print with sys.stdout.write, or using a trailing comma after the print to do the space, but another way to print a list with whatever seperator you want is a join:
print "".join(['.','.','.'])
# ...
print "foo".join(['.','.','.'])
#.foo.foo.