You could split the email into a list, using the @ as a separator, then print the first item in the list, which would be everything before the @. This would account for domain names of different length. For example, @yahoo.com is longer than @gmail.com, you'd have to account for the individual lengths.
email = "[email protected]"
a = email.split("@")[0]
print(a)
Or you can use the replace method as you are and do it on a case by case basis, but your splice is incorrect. The stop value is not included. So by your saying a = a.replace(a[-10:-1] , '')
you haven't replaced the m from .com. If you were to instead say a = a.replace(a[-10:],'')
you will replace everything from the -10th index to the end of the string.
Another potential solution would be to find the index of the @.
a = email[0:email.index('@')]
a = a.replace(a[-10:],'')
?