37

If you run x = 'y' 'z' in Python, you get x set to 'yz', which means that some kind of string concatenation is occurring when Python sees multiple strings next to each other.

But what kind of concatenation is this? Is it actually running 'y' + 'z' or is it running ''.join('y','z') or something else?

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    I think this is part of the lexer/parser. When Python parses the file and sees adjacent strings, it treats it as a single string.
    – univerio
    Oct 17, 2014 at 20:42
  • 1
    If there is a difference between the 'x' + 'y' and ''.join(..) statements, you could try out if you get different results. What happens, for example, if you throw in a variable?
    – Jongware
    Oct 17, 2014 at 20:44
  • You have a misconception that, when Python does things, it has to do them via constructs of Python.
    – Jim Balter
    Oct 18, 2014 at 21:21

2 Answers 2

58

The Python parser interprets that as one string. This is well documented in the Lexical Analysis documentation:

String literal concatenation

Multiple adjacent string literals (delimited by whitespace), possibly using different quoting conventions, are allowed, and their meaning is the same as their concatenation. Thus, "hello" 'world' is equivalent to "helloworld".

The compiled Python code sees just the one string object; you can see this by asking Python to produce an AST of such strings:

>>> import ast
>>> ast.dump(ast.parse("'hello' 'world'", mode='eval').body)
"Str(s='helloworld')"

In fact, it is the very act of building the AST that triggers the concatenation, as the parse tree is traversed, see the parsestrplus() function in the AST C source.

The feature is specifically aimed at reducing the need for backslashes; use it to break up a string across physical lines when still within a logical line:

print('Hello world!', 'This string is spans just one '
      'logical line but is broken across multiple physical '
      'source lines.')

Multiple physical lines can implicitly be joined into one physical line by using parentheses, square brackets or curly braces.

This string concatenation feature was copied from C, but Guido van Rossum is on record regretting adding it to Python. That post kicked of a long and very interesting thread, with a lot of support for removing the feature altogether.

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    @heltonbiker: it applies to strings on the same logical line. That can span multiple physical lines, if backslashes, parentheses or brackets are involved.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Oct 17, 2014 at 20:48
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    Note that concatenation of adjacent strings in source is largely a C-family tradition. Oct 17, 2014 at 21:07
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    @RussellBorogove: indeed, and since it doesn't offer the same advantages in Python as it does in C (for use in macros) it looks like its days in Python are numbered.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Oct 17, 2014 at 21:17
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    Uhm. I personally don't think that literal concatenation will be removed; at least not in the next few years. If they wanted to remove it they should have done that when making python3.0. Right now, with a lot of people already fighting with backwards compatibility introducing an other break may make things worse. They may be removed in python4.0, whenever this will be released...
    – Bakuriu
    Oct 18, 2014 at 9:02
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    @Bakuriu: I'm actually surprised at how strongly Guido was in support of removing it in that thread, given that a full-on PEP to remove it from Python 3 had already been rejected 6 years earlier.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Oct 18, 2014 at 10:26
8

The strings are being concatenated by the python parser before anything is executed, so its not really like 'y' + 'z' or ''.join('y','z'), except that it has the same effect.

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