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How do I remove the last character from a string?

"abcdefghij"  →  "abcdefghi"
3
  • 19
    I don't believe this to be a duplicate. In the other question, the OP asked for a substring in general. This OP asks for a very specific substring which is often very useful. I believe having this here for people to search AND for people to answer is useful. It would be nice for someone who may want 1) to take off a trailing os separator character from a bunch of paths or 2) to remove a last comma on each line of a CSV which has an empty last column or 3) to remove a trailing period/full stop (any punctuation) from the end of a bunch of sentence strings ... [more examples, no chars] Aug 26, 2020 at 20:31
  • 2
    Especially when one is new to programming, asking one to figure out the my_str[:-1] from the answers in the dup link seems a bit of a jump. As the linked site appears RIGHT NOW (see the lynx command), it's hard to find. $ lynx -dump https://web.archive.org/web/20200826203245/https://stackoverflow.com/questions/663171/how-do-i-get-a-substring-of-a-string-in-python | grep -n "\[[:][-]1\]" \n 540: print(a[:-1]) \n 542: In the above code, [:-1] declares to print from the starting till the \n 548: ` Note: Here a [:-1] is also the same as a [0:-1] and a [0:len(a)-1] Aug 26, 2020 at 20:50
  • 3
    I do believe this to be a duplicate of How do I get a substring of a string in Python?. The accepted answer shows how to use [:-2] for removing the last two characters of a string. I believe it should be not too hard for any programmer to infer that [:-1] can then be used to remove only the final character.
    – mkrieger1
    Aug 9, 2021 at 22:25

6 Answers 6

1228

Simple:

my_str =  "abcdefghij"
my_str = my_str[:-1]

Try the following code snippet to better understand how it works by casting the string as a list:

str1 = "abcdefghij"
list1 = list(str1)
print(list1)
list2 = list1[:-1]
print(list2)

In case, you want to accept the string from the user:

str1 = input("Enter :")
list1 = list(str1)
print(list1)
list2 = list1[:-1]
print(list2)

To make it take away the last word from a sentence (with words separated by whitespace like space):

str1 = input("Enter :")
list1 = str1.split()
print(list1)
list2 = list1[:-1]
print(list2)
5
  • 5
    Yes, st[-1] is only the last character of st
    – Cyrille
    Mar 18, 2013 at 13:45
  • 7
    Actually that slice will still work even if st is empty. Well, it will return an empty string still, but you won't get an error.
    – kindall
    Mar 18, 2013 at 13:58
  • 2
    What if you have a list of words and you want to delete the last character of every word? [blue, red, green] => [blu,re,gree] ?
    – Jellyse
    Apr 9, 2018 at 10:19
  • 12
    [i[:-1] for i in ['blue','red','green']]
    – Cyrille
    Apr 9, 2018 at 13:34
  • 7
    Looking at the examples, it is worth to mention that lists are mutable and that list.pop() method is the way to go when dealing with lists, as it removes the last item in place O(1), while [:-1] slicing creates a copy of a list without the last element in O(n-1) time plus O(n-1) space. Strings are immutable - so nothing to add.
    – Dmitry
    Sep 19, 2019 at 5:26
56

What you are trying to do is an extension of string slicing in Python:

Say all strings are of length 10, last char to be removed:

>>> st[:9]
'abcdefghi'

To remove last N characters:

>>> N = 3
>>> st[:-N]
'abcdefg'
11

The simplest solution for you is using string slicing.

Python 2/3:

source[0: -1]  # gets all string but not last char

Python 2:

source = 'ABC'    
result = "{}{}".format({source[0: -1], 'D')
print(result)  # ABD

Python 3:

source = 'ABC'    
result = f"{source[0: -1]}D"
print(result)  # ABD
4

Using slicing, one can specify the start and stop indexes to extract part of a string s. The format is s[start:stop]. However, start = 0 by default. So, we only need to specify stop.


Using stop = 3:

>>> s = "abcd"
>>> s[:3]
'abc'

Using stop = -1 to remove 1 character from the end (BEST METHOD):

>>> s = "abcd"
>>> s[:-1]
'abc'

Using stop = len(s) - 1:

>>> s = "abcd"
>>> s[:len(s) - 1]
'abc'
2
  • 1
    This merely seems to restate the earlier answers.
    – tripleee
    Oct 7, 2022 at 6:33
  • @tripleee Perhaps, but the only well-written answer is Anshul Goyal's, and even that doesn't directly describe that the basic slicing syntax takes the form (start:stop), which also solves the question "How do I remove the first N characters from a string?". For a newcomer, I imagine that [:-1] looks like unexplained magic. Lastly, this answer also gives some indication of how :-1 corresponds to :len(s) - 1. Oct 7, 2022 at 9:03
0

So there is a function called rstrip() for stuff like this. You enter the value you want to delete, in this case last element so string[-1] :

string = "AbCdEf" 
newString = string.rstrip(string[-1])
print(newString)

If you runt his code you shouul see the 'f' value is deleted.

OUTPUT: AbCdE
1
  • 2
    This will strip more than one character from "abcdeff"
    – tripleee
    Oct 7, 2022 at 6:33
0
input_str = "abcdefghij"
output_str = ''.join(input_str.rsplit(input_str[-1], 1))
print(output_str)  # Output: "abcdefghi"

In this method, input_str.rsplit(input_str[-1], 1) splits the string at the last occurrence of the last character, resulting in a list of substrings. Then, ''.join() concatenates those substrings back into a single string without the last character. The resulting string is stored in output_str.

This approach may be useful if you want to remove only the last occurrence of a specific character from the string, rather than removing the very last character in general.

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