2

i am trying to delete certain portion of a string if a match found in the string as below

string = 'Newyork, NY'

I want to delete all the characters after the comma from the string including comma, if comma is present in the string

Can anyone let me now how to do this .

4 Answers 4

7

Use .split():

string = string.split(',', 1)[0]

We split the string on the comma once, to save python the work of splitting on more commas.

Alternatively, you can use .partition():

string = string.partition(',')[0]

Demo:

>>> 'Newyork, NY'.split(',', 1)[0]
'Newyork'
>>> 'Newyork, NY'.partition(',')[0]
'Newyork'

.partition() is the faster method:

>>> import timeit
>>> timeit.timeit("'one, two'.split(',', 1)[0]")
0.52929401397705078
>>> timeit.timeit("'one, two'.partition(',')[0]")
0.26499605178833008
2
  • For die hard regex uses - you may as well throw in re.match('(.*?),', s).group(1) - but yeah, definitely str.split with max_splits is the way to go Sep 28, 2012 at 9:47
  • @jamylak: Indeed, and it is faster too.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Sep 28, 2012 at 9:59
1

You can split the string with the delimiter ",":

string.split(",")[0]

Example:

'Newyork, NY'.split(",") # ['Newyork', ' NY']
'Newyork, NY'.split(",")[0] # 'Newyork'
1

Try this :

s = "this, is"
m = s.index(',')
l = s[:m]
0

A fwe options:

  • string[:string.index(",")]

    This will raise a ValueError if , cannot be found in the string. Here, we find the position of the character with .index then use slicing.

  • string.split(",")[0]

    The split function will give you a list of the substrings that were separated by ,, and you just take the first element of the list. This will work even if , is not present in the string (as there'd be nothing to split in that case, we'd have string.split(...) == [string])

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.