What is the Ruby function to remove all white spaces? I'm looking for something kind of like PHP's trim()
?
25 Answers
If you want to remove only leading and trailing whitespace (like PHP's trim) you can use .strip
, but if you want to remove all whitespace, you can use .gsub(/\s+/, "")
instead .
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6
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59\s+ means 1 or more whitespace characters (space, newline, tab). The // surrounding show that it's a regular expression.– dylanfmJul 27, 2011 at 12:26
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3
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6strip was exactly what i was looking for, thanks for good question and awnser!– FrancoisJul 31, 2012 at 16:10
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19@BrettHolt The gsub expression is not the same as trim, but the questioner included the phrase "all whitespace", which isn't the same as trim either. So I gave alternatives. Sep 8, 2012 at 23:42
s = "I have white space".delete(' ')
And to emulate PHP's trim()
function:
s = " I have leading and trailing white space ".strip
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14this is much more readable than the regex, why is it not as popular?– ckarbassAug 17, 2012 at 3:27
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99@ckarbass: Because many people prefer overly complex solutions to simple problems. It goes away with experience.– Ed S.Aug 17, 2012 at 4:40
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116@ckarbass @Ed S. It isn't as popular because it isn't the same. The original question used the phrase "all whitespace", which includes tabs, newlines, etc. This proposed answer will not remove those other whitespace characters. As for "overly complex", I suggest comparing the simple regular expression to
.delete(' ').delete('\t').delete('\n') ...
, which is overly verbose and provides many opportunities for typos and errors of omission. Sep 8, 2012 at 23:48 -
16@joel.neely: I answered this question a long time ago, but read the question again, this time more carefully. The OP asked for "a function to remove all whitespace", but then asked for "something like PHP's trim()". So, it's a bit difficult to know exactly what they want here.
trim()
certainly does not remove newlines and other whitespace characters. You're choosing one interpretation of a vague question.– Ed S.Oct 4, 2012 at 17:51 -
4@joel.neely: That said, I agree that a solution which goes beyond the literal interpretation of the question is a better one in this case (i.e., a regex removing all characters which would constitute whitespace rather than a string of
delete()
calls.)– Ed S.Oct 4, 2012 at 21:49
String#strip
- remove all whitespace from the start and the end.
String#lstrip
- just from the start.
String#rstrip
- just from the end.
String#chomp
(with no arguments) - deletes line separators (\n
or \r\n
) from the end.
String#chop
- deletes the last character.
String#delete
- x.delete(" \t\r\n")
- deletes all listed whitespace.
String#gsub
- x.gsub(/[[:space:]]/, '')
- removes all whitespace, including unicode ones.
Note: All the methods above return a new string instead of mutating the original. If you want to change the string in place, call the corresponding method with !
at the end.
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The String#delete example appears to use a regex, but
\s
is in quotes instead of slashes. Also I couldn't find any mention in the documentation that delete can take a regex as an argument. Feb 5, 2017 at 15:31 -
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Thanks for teaching me something new. And also thanks for the reminder to try things in the smallest possible context (command line). Feb 8, 2017 at 5:21
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1
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6Only the final example in this answer catches the dread ASCII 160 'non-breaking space', the bane of web scrapers.
#strip
does not. See stackoverflow.com/questions/4859438/…– MatzFanApr 15, 2019 at 18:19
Related answer:
" clean up my edges ".strip
returns
"clean up my edges"
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That's the one I forgot about. I knew there was a method to remove whitespace which would do so by default if no arguments were passed. +1– Ed S.Oct 28, 2009 at 1:56
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This is equivalent to trim. Please refer to the quote from @Tadeck above.– Brett HJul 12, 2012 at 2:48
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3If there is a possibility that the variable is
nil
, be sure to run.to_s
method before running strip so that the strip method does not raise an error. Ex.str=nil; str.to_s.strip #=> ""
– scarver2Oct 26, 2012 at 20:15 -
If you are using Rails/ActiveSupport, you can use squish
method. It removes white space on both ends of the string and groups multiple white space to single space.
For eg.
" a b c ".squish
will result to:
"a b c"
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4Note that link-only answers are discouraged, SO answers should be the end-point of a search for a solution (vs. yet another stopover of references, which tend to get stale over time). Please consider adding a stand-alone synopsis here, keeping the link as a reference. Oct 17, 2013 at 10:59
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2I think this answer was enough explained and the fact that link was reference since the answer itself was clear explained. This function was good, thanks Nov 4, 2013 at 5:43
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4This is from ActiveSupport. You don't need all of Rails to use it, but you do need at least ActiveSupport and a
require 'active_support/core_ext/string/filters'
Nov 26, 2014 at 19:45 -
2To be clear, this is any whitespace. E.g.
"a \t \n \f \r \v b".squish == "a b"
Feb 25, 2020 at 23:47
"1232 23 2 23 232 232".delete(' ')
=> "123223223232232"
Delete works faster =)
user system total real
gsub, s 0.180000 0.010000 0.190000 (0.193014)
gsub, s+ 0.200000 0.000000 0.200000 (0.196408)
gsub, space 0.220000 0.000000 0.220000 (0.222711)
gsub, join 0.200000 0.000000 0.200000 (0.193478)
delete 0.040000 0.000000 0.040000 (0.045157)
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1
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1
delete(" \t\r\n")
will take care of typical whitespace, and is still faster than gsub. Nov 1, 2018 at 9:36
Ruby's .strip
method performs the PHP equivalent to trim()
.
To remove all whitespace:
" leading trailing ".squeeze(' ').strip
=> "leading trailing"
@Tass made me aware that my original answer removes duplicate letters in succession - YUCK! I've since switched to the squish method which is smarter about such occurrences if using the Rails framework.
require 'active_support/all'
" leading trailing ".squish
=> "leading trailing"
" good men ".squish
=> "good men"
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1This will remove "joined" duplicate characters.
"good men".squeeze.strip
will return"god men"
– TassJul 5, 2013 at 18:07 -
1Thanks for pointing that out @Tass. I've edited my answer in favor of the squish method.– scarver2Jul 6, 2013 at 12:29
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1+1 for "duplicate letters in succession." I couldn't come up with a way to describe the scenario. Well done! :-)– TassJul 8, 2013 at 15:45
It's a bit late, but anyone else googling this page might be interested in this version -
If you want to clean up a chunk of pre-formatted text that a user may have cut & pasted into your app somehow, but preserve the word spacing, try this:
content = " a big nasty chunk of something
that's been pasted from a webpage or something and looks
like this
"
content.gsub(/\s+/, " ").strip
#=> "a big nasty chunk of something that's been pasted from a webpage or something and looks like this"
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33
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5Or if you don't have Rails, and you don't have newlines,
squeeze(" ")
might work. Sep 4, 2012 at 23:22
To remove whitespace on both sides:
Kind of like php's trim()
" Hello ".strip
To remove all spaces:
" He llo ".gsub(/ /, "")
To remove all whitespace:
" He\tllo ".gsub(/\s/, "")
" Raheem Shaik ".strip
It will removes left & right side spaces.
This code would give us: "Raheem Shaik"
split.join
will blast all spaces anywhere in the string.
" a b c d ".split.join
> "abcd"
It's easy to type and remember, so it's nice on the console and for quick hacking. Arguably not welcome in serious code though as it masks the intent.
(Based on Piotr's comment in Justicle's answer above.)
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1Many, many thanks for this comment :-) This is the only method that works if you have long string which looks like a paragraph. Jan 19, 2017 at 21:20
Also don't forget:
$ s = " I have white space ".split
=> ["I", "have", "white", "space"]
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6
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1This is nice when iterating:
[" Hello World", "Big Giraffe "].map(&:split).map(&:join) #=> ["HelloWorld", "BigGiraffe"]
– tbloncarMar 8, 2014 at 19:27
You Could try this
"Some Special Text Values".gsub(/[[:space:]]+/, "")
using :space: removes non breaking space along with regular space.
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2This is actually the best answer IMHO, as in the wild HTML
 
and any other non-ASCII whitespaces will not be removed byString#strip
or matched by/\s/
. See the section entitled "POSIX bracket expressions" in the Regexp docs– MatzFanNov 25, 2017 at 20:31
Use gsub or delete. The difference is gsub could remove tabs, while delete cannot. Sometimes you do have tabs in files which are added by the editors.
a = "\tI have some whitespaces.\t"
a.gsub!(/\s/, '') #=> "Ihavesomewhitespaces."
a.gsub!(/ /, '') #=> "\tIhavesomewhitespaces.\t"
a.delete!(" ") #=> "\tIhavesomewhitespaces.\t"
a.delete!("/\s/") #=> "\tIhavesomewhitespaces.\t"
a.delete!('/\s/') #=> using single quote is unexpected, and you'll get "\tI have ome whitepace.\t"
The gsub method will do just fine.
The gsub method can be called on a string and says:
a = "this is a string"
a = a.gsub(" ","")
puts a
#Output: thisisastring
The gsub method searches for every occurrence of the first argument and replaces it with the second argument. In this case, it will replace every space within the string and remove it.
Another example:
b = "the white fox has a torn tail"
Let's replace every occurrence of the letter " t " with a capital " T "
b = b.gsub("t","T")
puts b
#Output: The whiTe fox has a Torn Tail
A lot of suggestions work here, but when I read your question and the specific line saying "removing all the whitespace", what came to my mind was this:
" a b c " => "abc"
And if that is really what is required, you can do this simple operation
wide_string = " a b c "
narrow_string = wide_string.delete(" ")
# you can pass all the different kinds
# of whitespaces that you want to remove
puts narrow_string # => "abc"
"asd sda sda sd".gsub(' ', '')
=> "asdsdasdasd"
For behavior exactly matching PHP trim
, the simplest method is to use the String#strip
method, like so:
string = " Many have tried; many have failed! "
puts "Original [#{string}]:#{string.length}"
new_string = string.strip
puts "Updated [#{new_string}]:#{new_string.length}"
Ruby also has an edit-in-place version, as well, called String.strip!
(note the trailing '!'). This doesn't require creating a copy of the string, and can be significantly faster for some uses:
string = " Many have tried; many have failed! "
puts "Original [#{string}]:#{string.length}"
string.strip!
puts "Updated [#{string}]:#{string.length}"
Both versions produce this output:
Original [ Many have tried; many have failed! ]:40
Updated [Many have tried; many have failed!]:34
I created a benchmark to test the performance of some basic uses of strip
and strip!
, as well as some alternatives. The test is this:
require 'benchmark'
string = 'asdfghjkl'
Times = 25_000
a = Times.times.map {|n| spaces = ' ' * (1+n/4); "#{spaces}#{spaces}#{string}#{spaces}" }
b = Times.times.map {|n| spaces = ' ' * (1+n/4); "#{spaces}#{spaces}#{string}#{spaces}" }
c = Times.times.map {|n| spaces = ' ' * (1+n/4); "#{spaces}#{spaces}#{string}#{spaces}" }
d = Times.times.map {|n| spaces = ' ' * (1+n/4); "#{spaces}#{spaces}#{string}#{spaces}" }
puts RUBY_DESCRIPTION
puts "============================================================"
puts "Running tests for trimming strings"
Benchmark.bm(20) do |x|
x.report("s.strip:") { a.each {|s| s = s.strip } }
x.report("s.rstrip.lstrip:") { a.each {|s| s = s.rstrip.lstrip } }
x.report("s.gsub:") { a.each {|s| s = s.gsub(/^\s+|\s+$/, "") } }
x.report("s.sub.sub:") { a.each {|s| s = s.sub(/^\s+/, "").sub(/\s+$/, "") } }
x.report("s.strip!") { a.each {|s| s.strip! } }
x.report("s.rstrip!.lstrip!:") { b.each {|s| s.rstrip! ; s.lstrip! } }
x.report("s.gsub!:") { c.each {|s| s.gsub!(/^\s+|\s+$/, "") } }
x.report("s.sub!.sub!:") { d.each {|s| s.sub!(/^\s+/, "") ; s.sub!(/\s+$/, "") } }
end
These are the results:
ruby 2.2.5p319 (2016-04-26 revision 54774) [x86_64-darwin14]
============================================================
Running tests for trimming strings
user system total real
s.strip: 2.690000 0.320000 3.010000 ( 4.048079)
s.rstrip.lstrip: 2.790000 0.060000 2.850000 ( 3.110281)
s.gsub: 13.060000 5.800000 18.860000 ( 19.264533)
s.sub.sub: 9.880000 4.910000 14.790000 ( 14.945006)
s.strip! 2.750000 0.080000 2.830000 ( 2.960402)
s.rstrip!.lstrip!: 2.670000 0.320000 2.990000 ( 3.221094)
s.gsub!: 13.410000 6.490000 19.900000 ( 20.392547)
s.sub!.sub!: 10.260000 5.680000 15.940000 ( 16.411131)
My personal preference is using the method .tr
as in:
string = "this is a string to smash together"
string.tr(' ', '') # => "thisisastringtosmashtogether"
Thanks to @FrankScmitt for pointing out that to make this delete all whitespace(not just spaces) you would need to write it as such:
string = "this is a string with tabs\t and a \nnewline"
string.tr(" \n\t", '') # => "thisisastringwithtabsandanewline"
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To remove all white spaces (space, tab, newline), consider using
s.tr(" \t\n", '')
instead. Feb 10, 2016 at 7:33 -
@Gavriel - I misread/misunderstood the question, thank you for pointing that out. Feb 11, 2016 at 6:44
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@FrankSchmitt I added your correction to my answer, to more properly answer the OP's question. Thank you for correcting me. Feb 11, 2016 at 6:44
I was trying to do this as I wanted to use a records "title" as an id in the view but the titles had spaces.
a solution is:
record.value.delete(' ') # Foo Bar -> FooBar
I'm a bit late to the game, but I remove trailing and leading whitespaces by using strip!
. If you have an array, such as I did, I needed to iterate through the array and save it after the instance ended. The ! took care of this. This removed all whitespaces at the end or the beginning, not just the first leading or the last trailing.
For example:
array = ["hello "," Melanie", "is", " new ", "to ", " programming"]
array.each do |i|
i.strip!
end
This would output to: ["hello","Melanie", "is", "new ", "to", "programming"]. I further explored/shared this in a video I made to highlight this code for similar question I had.
I'm newer to programming and using strip did not work as it didn't save it to the array after the loop ended.
I would use something like this:
my_string = "Foo bar\nbaz quux"
my_string.split.join
=> "Foobarbazquux"
Ruby's .scan()
and .join()
methods of String can also help to overcome whitespace in string.
scan(/\w+/).join
will remove all spaces and join the string
string = "White spaces in me".scan(/\w+/).join
=>"Whitespacesinme"
It is also removing space from left and right part of the string. Means ltrim
, rtrim
and trim
. Just in case if someone has background over C
, FoxPro
or Visual Basic
and jump in Ruby
.
2.1.6 :002 > string = " White spaces in me ".scan(/\w+/).join
=> "Whitespacesinme"
2.1.6 :003 > string = " White spaces in me".scan(/\w+/).join
=> "Whitespacesinme"
2.1.6 :004 > string = "White spaces in me ".scan(/\w+/).join
=> "Whitespacesinme"
2.1.6 :005 >
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1@AmitPandya Thank you so much for pointing out additional key points of .scan() method. Appreciated !!! Apr 13, 2016 at 18:03
Well actually there is a shorter and easier to read way to do this.
Why not just split and join?
"s t r i n g".split(" ").join()
You can try this:
"ab c d efg hi ".split.map(&:strip)
in order to get this:
["ab, "c", "d", "efg", "hi"]
or if you want a single string, just use:
"ab c d efg hi ".split.join
trim()
strips whitespace "from the beginning and end of a string" (as stated within documentation), it does not remove "all whitespaces".String#strip
or matching/\s+/
will remove only ASCII whitespace. If you want to ensure any non-ASCII whitespace is captured too (e.g. HTML's 
) see the oddly unpopular answer from @EBooker.