14

I call a function that returns code with all kinds of characters ranging from ( to ", and , and numbers.

Is there an elegant way to remove all of these so I end up with nothing but letters?

3

7 Answers 7

32

Given

s = '@#24A-09=wes()&8973o**_##me'  # contains letters 'Awesome'    

You can filter out non-alpha characters with a generator expression:

result = ''.join(c for c in s if c.isalpha())

Or filter with filter:

result = ''.join(filter(str.isalpha, s))    

Or you can substitute non-alpha with blanks using re.sub:

import re
result = re.sub(r'[^A-Za-z]', '', s)
3
  • Wow very slick. I really like when python has elegant solutions like this.
    – Joan Venge
    Apr 17, 2014 at 19:58
  • 4
    Note that isalpha only counts a-z as letters, not e.g. å, ä, ö, ø, ñ, é or à
    – leo
    Apr 19, 2016 at 14:44
  • 2
    The fastest approach is second one (filter). Approximately 2x times than others. First and third variants are almost equal, but re slightly slower.
    – Alex
    Dec 22, 2022 at 8:49
6

A solution using RegExes is quite easy here:

import re
newstring = re.sub(r"[^a-zA-Z]+", "", string)

Where string is your string and newstring is the string without characters that are not alphabetic. What this does is replace every character that is not a letter by an empty string, thereby removing it. Note however that a RegEx may be slightly overkill here.

A more functional approach would be:

newstring = "".join(filter(str.isalpha, string))

Unfortunately you can't just call stron a filterobject to turn it into a string, that would look much nicer...
Going the pythonic way it would be

newstring = "".join(c for c in string if c.isalpha())
2
  • 1
    It should be re.sub, re.replace doesn't exists. Apr 17, 2014 at 20:04
  • You are so right, I actually just looked that up, because I wasn't sure about the Python library, but ended up typing the wrong name anyway...
    – Cu3PO42
    Apr 17, 2014 at 20:06
3

You didn't mention you want only english letters, here's an international solution:

import unicodedata

str = u"hello, ѱϘяԼϷ!"
print ''.join(c for c in str if unicodedata.category(c).startswith('L'))
1

Here's another one, using string.ascii_letters

>>> import string
>>> "".join(x for x in s if x in string.ascii_letters)

`

1
>>> import re
>>> string = "';''';;';1123123!@#!@#!#!$!sd         sds2312313~~\"~s__"
>>> re.sub("[\W\d_]", "", string)
'sdsdss'
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  • This leaves underscores. Apr 17, 2014 at 20:09
  • Oh! yes it was leaving underscores. Edited the answer to remove underscores too. Apr 18, 2014 at 9:40
1

Well, I use this for myself in this kind of situations

Sorry, if it's outdated :)

string = "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog!"
alphabet = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"

def letters_only(source):
    result = ""
    for i in source.lower():
        if i in alphabet:
            result += i
    return result

print(letters_only(string))
0
s = '@#24A-09=wes()&8973o**_##me'

print(filter(str.isalpha, s))

# Awesome

About return value of filter:

filter(function or None, sequence) -> list, tuple, or string

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