I have a python server and when i ask the client the login name to check it is valid with the 1 in the database, for some reason there is always a whitespace at the end of the string. I already tried this:
newstring = oldstring.replace(' ', '') #not working, white space is still there
newstring = oldstring.strip() # also not working, whitespace is still there
#i also tried:
newstring = oldstring.replace('\n\t\r\s\f', '') #not working, white space is still there
Here is a code snippet from the server:
client_loggedin = False
while client_loggedin == False:
accountName = conn.recv(1024).decode("utf_8")
print(accountName + " = " + str(len(accountName)))
db = pymysql.connect("XXXXXXXXXXXXXsecretXXXXXXXXXX")
cursor = db.cursor()
cursor.execute("SELECT `XXXXXXXXXXXXX` FROM `XXXXXXXXXXXXX` WHERE `XXXXXXXXXXXXX`=%s", accountName)
dataraw = cursor.fetchone()
data = dataraw[0]
db.close()
if str(accountName) != str(data):
print (str(data) + "+" + str(accountName))
print("datalengte: " + str(len(data)) + " en " + "accountNamelengte: " + str(len(accountName)))
print ("Deze gebruiker bestaat niet")
elif accountName == data:
reply = "Welcome " + str(accountName)
conn.sendall(reply.encode("utf_8"))
client_loggedin == True
for x in clientList:
if x != conn:
x.sendall((str(accountName) + " has joined the server").encode("utf_8"))
Let's say there is an account name oliver in the data base and the client sends oliver. For some some reason i don't know is the string length 7 and not 6 and this makes comparing the value with the value from the database imposseble
strip
only removes leading and trailing whitespace andoldstring.replace('\n\t\r\s\f', '')
does not do what you think it does. In this case you're probably best using there
modules. Looking for a dupe to link.import re
and dore.sub("\s+", "", oldstring)
re.sub()
should work but do you have a sample string?