0

can I any one help me with this code now I get 'test2' as same as 'test', if I test is string it works good but as list it not working properly

 punc = set(string.punctuation)
 test=[" course content good though textbook badly written.not got energy 
 though seems good union.it distance course i'm sure facilities.n/an/ain 
last year offer poor terms academic personal. seems un become overwhelmed trying become run"]

test2 = ''.join(w for w in test if w not in punc)
 print(test2)

I want to remove all punctuation

3 Answers 3

1
import string
test=[" course content good though textbook badly written.not got energy though seems good union.it distance course i'm sure facilities.n/an/ain last year offer poor terms academic personal. seems un become overwhelmed trying become run"]
test2 = ''.join(w for w in test[0] if w not in string.punctuation )
print(test2)

If there are multiple strings inside the list

import string
test=["Hi There!"," course content good though textbook badly written.not got energy though seems good union.it distance course i'm sure facilities.n/an/ain last year offer poor terms academic personal. seems un become overwhelmed trying become run"]
#if there are multiple string in the list
for x in test:
    print(''.join(w for w in x if w not in string.punctuation ))
# If there are multiple strings in the list and you want to join all of them togather
print(''.join(w for w in [x for x in test] if w not in string.punctuation )) 

If you need to append it to a list variable

import string
test2=[]
test=["Hi There!"," course content good though textbook badly written.not got energy though seems good union.it distance course i'm sure facilities.n/an/ain last year offer poor terms academic personal. seems un become overwhelmed trying become run"]
#if there are multiple string in the list
for x in test:
    test2.append(''.join(w for w in x if w not in string.punctuation ))
print(test2)
6
  • This doesn't answer OP's question at all. He wanted to use a set. He even states that it works as a string.
    – DWuest
    Dec 29, 2018 at 8:46
  • @DWuest Where does he say he wants to use a set? All you can see is that he used a set. Not that he wants it using a set.
    – Bitto
    Dec 29, 2018 at 8:47
  • he says it doesn't work when using a list. He uses a set in his example code though.
    – DWuest
    Dec 29, 2018 at 8:49
  • @akrammalek This code should work fine. Comment if you are unable to solve it using this.
    – Bitto
    Dec 29, 2018 at 9:07
  • it works fine when you print it but when I want to append it to a variable it won't work Dec 29, 2018 at 9:12
1

Since test is a list, ‘for w in test’ will return the first item of the list, being the complete string. So you then need to access all the items of ‘w’ to actually test all individual characters of the string.

0

The fastest (and arguably most Pythonic way of doing this) is using translate.

import string
test=["Hi There!"," course content good though textbook badly written.not got energy though seems good union.it distance course i'm sure facilities.n/an/ain last year offer poor terms academic personal. seems un become overwhelmed trying become run"]

# Create a translate table that translates all punctuation to nothing
transtable = {ord(a):None for a in string.punctuation}

# Apply the translation to all strings in the list
[s.translate(transtable) for s in test]

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.