I used import string
and string.punctuation
but I realized I still have '…'
after conducting string.split()
. I also get ''
, which I don't know why I would get it after doing strip(
). As far as I understand, strip()
removes the peripheral spaces, so if I have spaces between a string it would not matter:
>>> s = 'a dog barks meow! @ … '
>>> s.strip()
'a dog barks meow! @ …'
>>> import string
>>> k = []
>>> for item in s.split():
... k.append(item.strip(string.punctuation))
...
>>> k
['a', 'dog', 'barks', 'meow', '', '…']
I would like to get rid of '', '…'
, the final output I'd like is ['a', 'dog', 'barks', 'meow']
.
I would like to refrain from using regex, but if that's the only solution I will consider it .. for now I'm more interested in solving this without resorting to regex.
…
is not an ASCII punctuation character, so as such, its not included instring.punctuation
. See: docs.python.org/3/library/…