14

I have a list of items which look like so:

 2.4       -2.0           4.3
-6.0       12.5           1.0

What I would like is to remove all those spaces and replace them with "," (comma) except for the spaces in front of first numbers (they should be just deleted (the spaces) and not replaced with anything). So the upper string items should look like so, after replacement:

2.4,-2.0,4.3
-6.0,12.5,1.0

Not like this:

,2.4,-2.0,4.3
,-6.0,12.5,1.0

Which is what the following code does:

newStrings = []
for s in strings:
    newStrings.append(re.sub('\s+', ',', s))

What regular expression for re.sub should be used to achieve that? Thank you.

0

3 Answers 3

26

To remove the leading and trailing spaces you can use .strip(), and then to replace consecutive whitespace characters using the regular expression \s+:

>>> import re
>>> s = " 2.4       -2.0           4.3"
>>> re.sub("\s+", ",", s.strip())
'2.4,-2.0,4.3'
8
  • Thank you Daniel. Is there some beginner friendly tutorial on regular expression? I tried this one, but looks to complicated for my level of knowledge: tutorialspoint.com/python/python_reg_expressions.htm
    – marco
    Commented Nov 15, 2014 at 19:33
  • There are many, but one written for Python is docs.python.org/2/howto/regex.html. Commented Nov 15, 2014 at 19:36
  • 2
    Checked that one too. Sometimes I have a feeling that people who do not want other people to learn Python, write these kinds of documentations. Thank you though.
    – marco
    Commented Nov 15, 2014 at 19:42
  • No problem. If the answer solved your problem would you mind marking it as the accepted answer? (Click the check mark) Commented Nov 15, 2014 at 19:44
  • 1
    @Biaspoint You could just do re.sub("\s+", ",", s.strip()) + "\n", unless your string has multiple newlines, in which case you could do re.sub("[^\S\r\n]+", ",", s.strip()). Regex taken from stackoverflow.com/a/3469155/343486 Commented Oct 4, 2022 at 22:59
1

Fastest way:

','.join(yourString.split())

Sample:

','.join("  a    bcd   e         f   ".split())
'a,bcd,e,f'
0

There are many solutions... This doesn't even briefly cover the whole topic, but it works:

Quick solution:

In [1]: import re
   ...: d_in = "strip \t\r\n\x00er \ter\rMY\   nr\x00 \t\r\nSPAC       ES\x00  ! "
   ...: d_out = re.sub("\s+", r",", d_in)
   ...: d_out
   ...: 
Out[1]: 'strip,\x00er,er,MY\\,nr\x00,SPAC,ES\x00,!,'

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