For instance, we have:
word = 'Some Random Word'
print '"' + word + '"'
Is there a better way to print double quotes around a variable?
For instance, we have:
word = 'Some Random Word'
print '"' + word + '"'
Is there a better way to print double quotes around a variable?
Update :
From Python 3.6, you can use f-strings
>>> print(f'"{word}"')
"Some Random Word"
Original Answer :
You can try %-formatting
>>> print('"%s"' % word)
"Some Random Word"
OR str.format
>>> print('"{}"'.format(word))
"Some Random Word"
OR escape the quote character with \
>>> print("\"%s\"" % word)
"Some Random Word"
And, if the double-quotes is not a restriction (i.e. single-quotes would do)
>>> from pprint import pprint, pformat
>>> print(pformat(word))
'Some Random Word'
>>> pprint(word)
'Some Random Word'
OR like others have already said (include it in your declaration)
>>> word = '"Some Random Word"'
>>> print(word)
"Some Random Word"
Use whichever you feel to be better or less confusing.
And, if you need to do it for multiple words, you might as well create a function
def double_quote(word):
return '"%s"' % word
print(double_quote(word), double_quote(word2))
And (if you know what you're doing &) if you're concerned about performance of these, see this comparison.
pformat
?) handle the possibility of word
containing a double quote.
Jun 21, 2021 at 14:43
word
itself having double quotes. The content of word
does not affect the ability of the methods to add double quotes around it. If someone does want only one pair of surrounding double quotes, then that's a somewhat different ask altogether.
Jun 21, 2021 at 18:53
word
around them. Could you please give a sample input & expected output?
Jun 25, 2021 at 22:15
How about json.dumps
:
>>> import json
>>> print(json.dumps("hello world"))
"hello world"
The advantage over other approaches mentioned here is that it escapes quotes inside the string as well (take that str.format
!), always uses double quotes and is actually intended for reliable serialization (take that repr()
!):
>>> print(json.dumps('hello "world"!'))
"hello \"world\"!"
You can try repr
Code:
word = "This is a random text"
print repr(word)
Output:
'This is a random text'
json.dumps
is probably the better option.
Jun 21, 2021 at 14:42
It seems silly, but works fine to me. It's easy to read.
word = "Some Random Word"
quotes = '"'
print quotes + word + quotes
Using format method or f-string with repr(), you can write it more elegant.
a = "foo"
print("{!r}".format(a))
b = "bar"
print(f"{b!r}")
Use escape sequence
Example:
int x = 10;
System.out.println("\"" + x + "\"");
O/P
"10"
word
contains double quotes of its own, do you want them to be escaped or left alone?