18

What's the shortest way to do this in Python?

string = "   xyz"

must return index = 3

1

7 Answers 7

51
>>> s = "   xyz"
>>> len(s) - len(s.lstrip())
3
2
  • 3
    If s is long and the whitespace prefix is short, other solutions (ones that don't make a temp almost-copy of s, get its length, and then throw the temp object away) may be preferable. Mar 4, 2010 at 23:39
  • @JohnMachin string are immutable in Python so I very much doubt the interpreter makes a copy for strip(). The original string can simply be reused with a different start position.
    – bernie
    Sep 3, 2020 at 19:58
6
>>> next(i for i, j in enumerate('   xyz') if j.strip())
3

or

>>> next(i for i, j in enumerate('   xyz') if j not in string.whitespace)
3

in versions of Python < 2.5 you'll have to do:

(...).next()
3
  • blah.strip() and blah.isspace() work OK with Unicode; string.whitespace is frozen in the last century. Mar 4, 2010 at 12:26
  • @John: says who? I see string.whitespace as the second most efficient approach after the accepted one. Mar 4, 2010 at 12:31
  • 1
    Re-read my comment. I'm talking about working with Unicode; no mention of efficiency. Mar 4, 2010 at 12:43
2

Looks like the "regexes can do anything" brigade have taken the day off, so I'll fill in:

>>> tests = [u'foo', u' foo', u'\xA0foo']
>>> import re
>>> for test in tests:
...     print len(re.match(r"\s*", test, re.UNICODE).group(0))
...
0
1
1
>>>

FWIW: time taken is O(the_answer), not O(len(input_string))

2

Many of the previous solutions are iterating at several points in their proposed solutions. And some make copies of the data (the string). re.match(), strip(), enumerate(), isspace()are duplicating behind the scene work. The

next(idx for idx, chr in enumerate(string) if not chr.isspace())
next(idx for idx, chr in enumerate(string) if not chr.whitespace)

are good choices for testing strings against various leading whitespace types such as vertical tabs and such, but that adds costs too.

However if your string uses just a space characters or tab charachers then the following, more basic solution, clear and fast solution also uses the less memory.

def get_indent(astr):

    """Return index of first non-space character of a sequence else False."""

    try:
        iter(astr)
    except:
        raise

    # OR for not raising exceptions at all
    # if hasattr(astr,'__getitem__): return False

    idx = 0
    while idx < len(astr) and astr[idx] == ' ':
        idx += 1
    if astr[0] <> ' ':
        return False
    return idx

Although this may not be the absolute fastest or simpliest visually, some benefits with this solution are that you can easily transfer this to other languages and versions of Python. And is likely the easiest to debug, as there is little magic behavior. If you put the meat of the function in-line with your code instead of in a function you'd remove the function call part and would make this solution similar in byte code to the other solutions.

Additionally this solution allows for more variations. Such as adding a test for tabs

or astr[idx] == '\t':

Or you can test the entire data as iterable once instead of checking if each line is iterable. Remember things like ""[0] raises an exception whereas ""[0:] does not.

If you wanted to push the solution to inline you could go the non-Pythonic route:

i = 0
while i < len(s) and s[i] == ' ': i += 1

print i
3

. .

1
import re
def prefix_length(s):
   m = re.match('(\s+)', s)
   if m:
      return len(m.group(0))
   return 0
5
  • """Make sure your code "does nothing" gracefully.""" -- attributed to Jon Bentley IIRC. Mar 4, 2010 at 13:06
  • Forgive me my ignorance, but who is him?
    – Pablo
    Mar 4, 2010 at 13:28
  • 3
    Ignorance is forgivable; unwillingness to use a search engine is another matter ;-) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jon_Bentley Mar 4, 2010 at 14:23
  • @JohnMachin - D'oh... good point about + instead of *. My thinking cap wasn't fully on this morning.
    – D.Shawley
    Mar 4, 2010 at 14:31
  • Also you have redundant parentheses. Mar 4, 2010 at 14:44
-1
>>> string = "   xyz"
>>> next(idx for idx, chr in enumerate(string) if not chr.isspace())
3
1
  • -1 as it fails for any all-whitespace string ... "StopIteration:" error is output in that case
    – kmonsoor
    Feb 14, 2014 at 9:25
-1
>>> string = "   xyz"
>>> map(str.isspace,string).index(False)
3
1
  • -1 as it fails for any all-whitespace string ... :( "ValueError: False is not in list"
    – kmonsoor
    Feb 14, 2014 at 9:23

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