I have quite large amount of text which include control charachters like \n \t and \r. I need to replace them with a simple space--> " ". What is the fastest way to do this? Thanks
6 Answers
I think the fastest way is to use str.translate()
:
import string
s = "a\nb\rc\td"
print s.translate(string.maketrans("\n\t\r", " "))
prints
a b c d
EDIT: As this once again turned into a discussion about performance, here some numbers. For long strings, translate()
is way faster than using regular expressions:
s = "a\nb\rc\td " * 1250000
regex = re.compile(r'[\n\r\t]')
%timeit t = regex.sub(" ", s)
# 1 loops, best of 3: 1.19 s per loop
table = string.maketrans("\n\t\r", " ")
%timeit s.translate(table)
# 10 loops, best of 3: 29.3 ms per loop
That's about a factor 40.
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5It is important to note that string.translate and string.makestrans is not available in Python3. re based solution seems better. Feb 10, 2011 at 10:05
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@Ignacio: import string;hasattr(string,'translate');hasattr(string,'maketrans') It will be False, if you do hasattr(str,'translate') and hasattr(str,'maketrans') it is True. module string is just a collection of string constants. Moreover, as per definition and proper way to use maketrans would be bytes.maketrans. Thanks! Feb 10, 2011 at 10:21
You may also try regular expressions:
import re
regex = re.compile(r'[\n\r\t]')
regex.sub(' ', my_str)
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I've compared the actual performance and it looks like using regular expressions is as fast as using the string module. Feb 10, 2011 at 10:14
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python2.6 timeit.py -s "import string" -s "s = 'a\nb\rc\td'" -s "s.translate(string.maketrans('\n\t\r', ' '))"
10000000 loops, best of 3: 0.0235 usec per loop Feb 10, 2011 at 10:15 -
python2.6 timeit.py -s "import re" -s "regex = re.compile(r'[\n\r\t]')" -s "regex.sub(' ', 'a\nb\rc\td')"
10000000 loops, best of 3: 0.0232 usec per loop Feb 10, 2011 at 10:15 -
1@Michal - are you comparing
regex.sub(...)
tos.translate(string.maketrans(...))
or tos.translate(preparedTrans)
only?– eumiroFeb 10, 2011 at 10:20 -
1@Michal: It's completely meaningless to try this on a string with 7 characters. See the edit in my answer. Feb 10, 2011 at 10:39
If you want to normalise whitespace (replace runs of one or more whitespace characters by a single space, and strip leading and trailing whitespace) this can be accomplished by using string methods:
>>> text = ' foo\tbar\r\nFred Nurke\t Joe Smith\n\n'
>>> ' '.join(text.split())
'foo bar Fred Nurke Joe Smith'
using regex
re.sub(r'\s+', ' ', '1\n2\r3\t4')
without regex
>>> ' '.join('1\n\n2\r3\t4'.split())
'1 2 3 4'
>>>
my_string
is the string where you want to delete specific control characters.
As strings are immutable in python, after substitute operation you need to assign it to another string or reassign it:
my_string = re.sub(r'[\n\r\t]*', '', my_string)
foo\r\nbar
, do you want to replace\r\n
by two spaces or only 1?