1210

I want to eliminate all the whitespace from a string, on both ends, and in between words.

I have this Python code:

def my_handle(self):
    sentence = ' hello  apple  '
    sentence.strip()

But that only eliminates the whitespace on both sides of the string. How do I remove all whitespace?

3
  • 19
    What should your result look like? hello apple? helloapple?
    – Mark Byers
    Nov 25, 2011 at 13:57
  • 4
    @JoachimPileborg, not exactly I think, because it's also about reducung whitespace between the words.
    – wal-o-mat
    Nov 25, 2011 at 13:59
  • 18
    Correct me if wrong, but "whitespace" is not synonymous with "space characters". The current answer marked as correct does not remove all whitespace. But, since it's marked as correct it must have answered the intended question? So we should edit the question to reflect the accepted answer? @Kalanamith Did, or do, you want to remove all whitespace or only spaces?
    – AnnanFay
    Dec 6, 2016 at 17:23

15 Answers 15

2303

If you want to remove leading and ending spaces, use str.strip():

>>> "  hello  apple  ".strip()
'hello  apple'

If you want to remove all space characters, use str.replace() (NB this only removes the “normal” ASCII space character ' ' U+0020 but not any other whitespace):

>>> "  hello  apple  ".replace(" ", "")
'helloapple'

If you want to remove duplicated spaces, use str.split() followed by str.join():

>>> " ".join("  hello  apple  ".split())
'hello apple'
8
  • 67
    The greatness of this function is that it also removes the '\r\n' from the html file I received from Beautiful Soup.
    – lsheng
    May 26, 2014 at 8:16
  • 69
    I like "".join(sentence.split()), this removes all whitespace (spaces, tabs, newlines) from anywhere in sentence.
    – don
    May 25, 2016 at 17:57
  • 1
    begginner here. Can someone explain me why print(sentence.join(sentence.split())) results to 'hello hello appleapple'? Just want to understand how code is processed here. Nov 22, 2016 at 17:22
  • 6
    @YannisDran check the str.join() documentation, when you call sentence.join(str_list) you ask python to join items from str_list with sentenceas separator. Nov 24, 2016 at 16:24
  • 13
    "".join(sentence.split()) is indeed the canonical solution, efficiently removing all whitespace rather than merely spaces. Mark Byers' excellent answer should probably have been accepted in lieu of this less applicable answer. Jul 4, 2017 at 6:44
427

To remove only spaces use str.replace:

sentence = sentence.replace(' ', '')

To remove all whitespace characters (space, tab, newline, and so on) you can use split then join:

sentence = ''.join(sentence.split())

or a regular expression:

import re
pattern = re.compile(r'\s+')
sentence = re.sub(pattern, '', sentence)

If you want to only remove whitespace from the beginning and end you can use strip:

sentence = sentence.strip()

You can also use lstrip to remove whitespace only from the beginning of the string, and rstrip to remove whitespace from the end of the string.

2
  • Note: You don't need to compile step, re.sub (and friends) cache the compiled pattern. See also, Emil's answer. Apr 22, 2015 at 18:03
  • 1
    python3: yourstr.translate(str.maketrans('', '', ' \n\t\r'))
    – deed02392
    Apr 17, 2019 at 12:44
154

An alternative is to use regular expressions and match these strange white-space characters too. Here are some examples:

Remove ALL spaces in a string, even between words:

import re
sentence = re.sub(r"\s+", "", sentence, flags=re.UNICODE)

Remove spaces in the BEGINNING of a string:

import re
sentence = re.sub(r"^\s+", "", sentence, flags=re.UNICODE)

Remove spaces in the END of a string:

import re
sentence = re.sub(r"\s+$", "", sentence, flags=re.UNICODE)

Remove spaces both in the BEGINNING and in the END of a string:

import re
sentence = re.sub("^\s+|\s+$", "", sentence, flags=re.UNICODE)

Remove ONLY DUPLICATE spaces:

import re
sentence = " ".join(re.split("\s+", sentence, flags=re.UNICODE))

(All examples work in both Python 2 and Python 3)

3
  • Did not work for "\u202a1234\u202c". Gives the same output: u'\u202a1234\u202c'
    – Sarang
    Jul 6, 2016 at 17:19
  • 1
    @Sarang: Those are not whitespace characters (google them and you'll see) but "General Punctuation". My answer only deals with removing characters classified as whitespace. Jul 7, 2016 at 18:04
  • This is the only solution I see here that removes those damn pesky unicode whitespace characters, thanks fam
    – CapnShanty
    Oct 16, 2019 at 14:13
62

"Whitespace" includes space, tabs, and CRLF. So an elegant and one-liner string function we can use is str.translate:

Python 3

' hello  apple '.translate(str.maketrans('', '', ' \n\t\r'))

OR if you want to be thorough:

import string
' hello  apple'.translate(str.maketrans('', '', string.whitespace))

Python 2

' hello  apple'.translate(None, ' \n\t\r')

OR if you want to be thorough:

import string
' hello  apple'.translate(None, string.whitespace)
3
  • 2
    This won't help with Unicode whitespace like \xc2\xa0
    – Suzana
    Dec 29, 2015 at 18:07
  • 5
    ans.translate( None, string.whitespace ) produces only builtins.TypeError: translate() takes exactly one argument (2 given) for me. Docs says that argument is a translate table, see string.maketrans(). But see comment by Amnon Harel, below.
    – user405
    Sep 3, 2017 at 21:07
  • 2
    ' hello apple'.translate(str.maketrans('', '', string.whitespace)) Note: its better to make a variable to store the trans-table if you intend to do this multiple times. Dec 10, 2018 at 19:12
19

For removing whitespace from beginning and end, use strip.

>> "  foo bar   ".strip()
"foo bar"
2
  • 3
    The question specifically asks for removing all of the whitespace and not just at the ends. Please take notice. Mar 4, 2020 at 11:38
  • This answer is irrelevant to this question
    – Scott
    Sep 21, 2021 at 9:50
12
' hello  \n\tapple'.translate({ord(c):None for c in ' \n\t\r'})

MaK already pointed out the "translate" method above. And this variation works with Python 3 (see this Q&A).

1
  • 2
    Thanks! Or, xxx.translate( { ord(c) :None for c in string.whitespace } ) for thoroughness.
    – user405
    Sep 3, 2017 at 21:10
10

In addition, strip has some variations:

Remove spaces in the BEGINNING and END of a string:

sentence= sentence.strip()

Remove spaces in the BEGINNING of a string:

sentence = sentence.lstrip()

Remove spaces in the END of a string:

sentence= sentence.rstrip()

All three string functions strip lstrip, and rstrip can take parameters of the string to strip, with the default being all white space. This can be helpful when you are working with something particular, for example, you could remove only spaces but not newlines:

" 1. Step 1\n".strip(" ")

Or you could remove extra commas when reading in a string list:

"1,2,3,".strip(",")
7

Be careful:

strip does a rstrip and lstrip (removes leading and trailing spaces, tabs, returns and form feeds, but it does not remove them in the middle of the string).

If you only replace spaces and tabs you can end up with hidden CRLFs that appear to match what you are looking for, but are not the same.

1
  • Although this is a good point, this isn't really an answer and should be a comment unless you provide a solution. Would you care to provide a solution for this is exactly what I'm looking for? Cheers
    – Dpedrinha
    Dec 10, 2020 at 19:44
6

eliminate all the whitespace from a string, on both ends, and in between words.

>>> import re
>>> re.sub("\s+", # one or more repetition of whitespace
    '', # replace with empty string (->remove)
    ''' hello
...    apple
... ''')
'helloapple'

Python docs:

1
  • I know re has been suggested before, but I found that the actual answer to the question title was a bit hidden amongst all the other options.
    – handle
    Mar 13, 2020 at 15:58
5

I use split() to ignore all whitespaces and use join() to concatenate strings.

sentence = ''.join(' hello  apple  '.split())
print(sentence) #=> 'helloapple'

I prefer this approach because it is only a expression (not a statement).
It is easy to use and it can use without binding to a variable.

print(''.join(' hello  apple  '.split())) # no need to binding to a variable
3
import re    
sentence = ' hello  apple'
re.sub(' ','',sentence) #helloworld (remove all spaces)
re.sub('  ',' ',sentence) #hello world (remove double spaces)
1
  • 4
    the question was too remove all white space which includes tabs and new line characters, this snippet will only remove regular spaces. Oct 24, 2016 at 16:59
3

In the following script we import the regular expression module which we use to substitute one space or more with a single space. This ensures that the inner extra spaces are removed. Then we use strip() function to remove leading and trailing spaces.

# Import regular expression module
import re

# Initialize string
a = "     foo      bar   "

# First replace any number of spaces with a single space
a = re.sub(' +', ' ', a)

# Then strip any leading and trailing spaces.
a = a.strip()

# Show results
print(a)
2
  • 2
    It helps more if you supply an explanation why this is the preferred solution and explain how it works. We want to educate, not just provide code. Feb 21, 2022 at 5:21
  • @theTinMan thanks for the recommendation I just added the explanations. Feb 28, 2022 at 8:05
1

I found that this works the best for me:

test_string = '  test   a   s   test '
string_list = [s.strip() for s in str(test_string).split()]
final_string = ' '.join(string_array)
# final_string: 'test a s test'

It removes any whitespaces, tabs, etc.

0

All string characters are unicode literal in Python 3; as a consequence, since str.split() splits on all white space characters, that means it splits on unicode white space characters. So split + join syntax (as in 1, 2, 3) will produce the same output as re.sub with the UNICODE flag (as in 4); in fact, the UNICODE flag is redundant here (as in 2, 5, 6, 7).

import re
import sys

# all unicode characters
sentence = ''.join(map(chr, range(sys.maxunicode+1)))

# remove all white space characters
x = ''.join(sentence.split())
y = re.sub(r"\s+", "", sentence, flags=re.UNICODE)
z = re.sub(r"\s+", "", sentence)

x == y == z      # True

In terms of performance, since Python's string methods are optimized, they are much faster than regex. As the following timeit test shows, when removing all white space characters from the string in the OP, Python string methods are over 7 times faster than re option.

import timeit

import timeit

setup = """
import re
s = ' hello  \t apple  '
"""

t1 = min(timeit.repeat("''.join(s.split())", setup))
t2 = min(timeit.repeat("re.sub(r'\s+', '', s, flags=re.UNICODE)", setup))


t2 / t1  # 7.868004799367726
-2

try this.. instead of using re i think using split with strip is much better

def my_handle(self):
    sentence = ' hello  apple  '
    ' '.join(x.strip() for x in sentence.split())
#hello apple
    ''.join(x.strip() for x in sentence.split())
#helloapple

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