LIST = ['Python','problem','whatever']
print(LIST)
When I run this program I get
[Python, problem, whatever]
Is it possible to remove that square brackets from output?
You could convert it to a string instead of printing the list directly:
print(", ".join(LIST))
If the elements in the list aren't strings, you can convert them to string using either repr
(if you want quotes around strings) or str
(if you don't), like so:
LIST = [1, "foo", 3.5, { "hello": "bye" }]
print( ", ".join( repr(e) for e in LIST ) )
Which gives the output:
1, 'foo', 3.5, {'hello': 'bye'}
[['String-1','String-2','String-3']]
and the result will be like this ['String-1','String-2','String-3']
Commented
Jul 4, 2017 at 8:58
list[0]
Commented
Mar 2, 2023 at 6:44
Yes, there are several ways to do it. For instance, you can convert the list to a string and then remove the first and last characters:
l = ['a', 2, 'c']
print str(l)[1:-1]
'a', 2, 'c'
If your list contains only strings and you want remove the quotes too then you can use the join
method as has already been said.
if you have numbers in list, you can use map
to apply str
to each element:
print ', '.join(map(str, LIST))
^ map
is C code so it's faster than str(i) for i in LIST
def listToStringWithoutBrackets(list1):
return str(list1).replace('[','').replace(']','')
map
instead ofstr(i) for i in LIST
-map
is C code so it's faster