-1
from matplotlib import style

print(plt.style.available)

Output:

['seaborn-dark', 'seaborn-darkgrid', 'seaborn-ticks', 'fivethirtyeight', 'seaborn-whitegrid', 'classic', '_classic_test', 'fast', 'seaborn-talk', 'seaborn-dark-palette', 'seaborn-bright', 'seaborn-pastel', 'grayscale', 'seaborn-notebook', 'ggplot', 'seaborn-colorblind', 'seaborn-muted', 'seaborn', 'Solarize_Light2', 'seaborn-paper', 'bmh', 'tableau-colorblind10', 'seaborn-white', 'dark_background', 'seaborn-poster', 'seaborn-deep']

I want to separate every element with ',' so that I like to get like this :

seaborn-dark
seaborn-darkgrid
seaborn-ticks
..
..
..
seaborn-poster
seaborn-deep

What method do I use for that?

7
  • 1
    Just do a bit of digging what options Python offers for string manipulation and toy around with it. As a noob here, also take the tour and read How to Ask, if you wanna. Nov 30, 2019 at 19:46
  • Are you just trying to print the list out?
    – glotchimo
    Nov 30, 2019 at 19:46
  • It's a list so print it element by element with a for statement
    – rivamarco
    Nov 30, 2019 at 19:47
  • The comma , is there because it's separating each element in the list. So you need to create a way to have type of loop that goes through each index of that list. Unless you're trying to make a variable with a multi-line string, you'll have to do something else, which is something you need to clarify.
    – user6501909
    Nov 30, 2019 at 19:49
  • The key question: What do you want it separate with "," for? Next step? What want you create with the comma separated result?
    – Geeocode
    Nov 30, 2019 at 19:59

2 Answers 2

0

You can simply use the .join() command for that.

" ".join(style.available) 

which will output a string with the desired format you need.

Another way to print each one in a separate line without using a for loop is simply like this.

print(*style.available)
0

You need to use a for loop to iterate through the list and print each item.

for item in plt.style.available:
    print(item)

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