10

I'm new here and also new to Python. I wonder what f in print(f'Column names are {"-".join(row)}') does. I tried deleting it and then Column names are {"-".join(row)} become normal string.

Could you please tell me what f calls, so I can google to learn more about it? Thanks guys.

import csv

with open('CSV_test.txt') as csv_file: 
    csv_reader = csv.reader(csv_file, delimiter=',')
    line_count = 0
    for row in csv_reader:
        if line_count == 0:
            print(f'Column names are {"-".join(row)}')
            line_count += 1
        else:
            print(f'\t{row[0]} works in the {row[1]} '
                  f'department, and was born in {row[2]}.')
            line_count += 1
    print(f'Processed {line_count} lines.')
2

3 Answers 3

21

This is called f-strings and are quite straightforward : when using an "f" in front of a string, all the variables inside curly brackets are read and replaced by there value. For example :

    age = 18
    message = f"You are {age} years old"
    print(message)

Will return "You are 18 years old"

This is similar to str.format (https://docs.python.org/3/library/stdtypes.html#str.format) but in a more concise way.

0
3

String starting with f are formatted string literals.

Suppose you have a variable:

pi = 3.14

To concatenate it to a string you'd do:

s = "pi = " + str(pi)

Formatted strings come in handy here. Using them you can use this do the same:

s = f"pi = {pi}"

{pi} is simply replaced by the value in the pi

1

join method returns a string in which the elements of sequence have been joined by a separator. In your code, it takes row list and join then by separator -.

Then by using f-string, expression specified by {} will be replaced with it's value.

Suppose that row = ["1", "2", "3"] then output will be Column names are 1-2-3.

2
  • Be careful, '-'.join([1, 2, 3]) throws an Exception. '-'.join(['1', '2', '3']) reutrns what you expect. I fixed it in your answer Oct 4, 2019 at 9:51
  • .join() takes an iterable whose elements must be a string.
    – Nameless
    Apr 4, 2021 at 0:15

Your Answer

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

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