How to check for a new line in a string?
Does python3.x have anything similar to java's regular operation where direct if (x=='*\n')
would have worked?
How to check for a new line in a string?
Does python3.x have anything similar to java's regular operation where direct if (x=='*\n')
would have worked?
If you just want to check if a newline (\n
) is present, you can just use Python's in
operator to check if it's in a string:
>>> "\n" in "hello\ngoodbye"
True
... or as part of an if
statement:
if "\n" in foo:
print "There's a newline in variable foo"
You don't need to use regular expressions in this case.
Yes, like this:
if '\n' in mystring:
...
(Python does have regular expressions, but they're overkill in this case.)
See:
https://docs.python.org/2/glossary.html#term-universal-newlines
A manner of interpreting text streams in which all of the following are recognized as ending a line: the Unix end-of-line convention '\n', the Windows convention '\r\n', and the old Macintosh convention '\r'. See PEP 278 and PEP 3116, as well as str.splitlines() for an additional use.
I hate to be the one to split hairs over this (pun intended), but this suggests that a sufficient test would be:
if '\n' in mystring or '\r' in mystring:
...
'\r\n'
is translated to'\n'
on input and in reverse'\n'
is translated toos.linesep
on output. If you don't care about Unicode newlines;'\n'
is all you need in most cases.