528

I want to find the position (or index) of the last occurrence of a certain substring in given input string str.

For example, suppose the input string is str = 'hello' and the substring is target = 'l', then it should output 3.

How can I do this?

12 Answers 12

852

Use .rfind():

>>> s = 'hello'
>>> s.rfind('l')
3

Also don't use str as variable name or you'll shadow the built-in str().

0
121

You can use rfind() or rindex()
Python2 links: rfind() rindex()

>>> s = 'Hello StackOverflow Hi everybody'

>>> print( s.rfind('H') )
20

>>> print( s.rindex('H') )
20

>>> print( s.rfind('other') )
-1

>>> print( s.rindex('other') )
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ValueError: substring not found

The difference is when the substring is not found, rfind() returns -1 while rindex() raises an exception ValueError (Python2 link: ValueError).

If you do not want to check the rfind() return code -1, you may prefer rindex() that will provide an understandable error message. Else you may search for minutes where the unexpected value -1 is coming from within your code...


Example: Search of last newline character

>>> txt = '''first line
... second line
... third line'''

>>> txt.rfind('\n')
22

>>> txt.rindex('\n')
22
1
  • Hi @JacobSchneider. I have added an example according to your comment. I do not understand your issue. Please provide more information: Python version, Content of your string... Cheers
    – oHo
    Apr 23, 2018 at 9:46
49

Use the str.rindex method.

>>> 'hello'.rindex('l')
3
>>> 'hello'.index('l')
2
1
  • 2
    This will throw an error if the word not found in the string. Using rfind would be better.
    – Ravi
    Dec 18, 2020 at 17:12
12

Not trying to resurrect an inactive post, but since this hasn't been posted yet...

(This is how I did it before finding this question)

s = "hello"
target = "l"
last_pos = len(s) - 1 - s[::-1].index(target)

Explanation: When you're searching for the last occurrence, really you're searching for the first occurrence in the reversed string. Knowing this, I did s[::-1] (which returns a reversed string), and then indexed the target from there. Then I did len(s) - 1 - the index found because we want the index in the unreversed (i.e. original) string.

Watch out, though! If target is more than one character, you probably won't find it in the reversed string. To fix this, use last_pos = len(s) - 1 - s[::-1].index(target[::-1]), which searches for a reversed version of target.

2
  • 5
    I upvoted this answer because, though not too useful for the original question, it was interesting and educational in general. I think much of one's learning of Python is just like this. Feb 13, 2020 at 3:03
  • Especially in an interview context where they might not want you to use built-in methods, that's useful Apr 14, 2022 at 20:50
7

Try this:

s = 'hello plombier pantin'
print (s.find('p'))
6
print (s.index('p'))
6
print (s.rindex('p'))
15
print (s.rfind('p'))
15
4

For this case both rfind() and rindex() string methods can be used, both will return the highest index in the string where the substring is found like below.

test_string = 'hello'
target = 'l'
print(test_string.rfind(target))
print(test_string.rindex(target))

But one thing should keep in mind while using rindex() method, rindex() method raises a ValueError [substring not found] if the target value is not found within the searched string, on the other hand rfind() will just return -1.

3

The more_itertools library offers tools for finding indices of all characters or all substrings.

Given

import more_itertools as mit


s = "hello"
pred = lambda x: x == "l"

Code

Characters

Now there is the rlocate tool available:

next(mit.rlocate(s, pred))
# 3

A complementary tool is locate:

list(mit.locate(s, pred))[-1]
# 3

mit.last(mit.locate(s, pred))
# 3

Substrings

There is also a window_size parameter available for locating the leading item of several items:

s = "How much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?"
substring = "chuck"
pred = lambda *args: args == tuple(substring)

next(mit.rlocate(s, pred=pred, window_size=len(substring)))
# 59
2

Python String rindex() Method

Description
Python string method rindex() returns the last index where the substring str is found, or raises an exception if no such index exists, optionally restricting the search to string[beg:end].

Syntax
Following is the syntax for rindex() method −

str.rindex(str, beg=0 end=len(string))

Parameters
str − This specifies the string to be searched.

beg − This is the starting index, by default its 0

len − This is ending index, by default its equal to the length of the string.

Return Value
This method returns last index if found otherwise raises an exception if str is not found.

Example
The following example shows the usage of rindex() method.

Live Demo

!/usr/bin/python

str1 = "this is string example....wow!!!";
str2 = "is";

print str1.rindex(str2)
print str1.index(str2)

When we run above program, it produces following result −

5
2

Ref: Python String rindex() Method - Tutorialspoint

1

If you don't wanna use rfind then this will do the trick/

def find_last(s, t):
    last_pos = -1
    while True:
        pos = s.find(t, last_pos + 1)
        if pos == -1:
            return last_pos
        else:
            last_pos = pos
1
# Last Occurrence of a Character in a String without using inbuilt functions
str = input("Enter a string : ")
char = input("Enter a character to serach in string : ")
flag = 0
count = 0
for i in range(len(str)):
    if str[i] == char:
        flag = i
if flag == 0:
    print("Entered character ",char," is not present in string")
else:
    print("Character ",char," last occurred at index : ",flag)
0

you can use rindex() function to get the last occurrence of a character in string

s="hellloooloo"
b='l'
print(s.rindex(b))
-1
str = "Hello, World"
target='l'
print(str.rfind(target) +1)

or

str = "Hello, World"
flag =0
target='l'
for i,j in enumerate(str[::-1]):
    if target == j:
       flag = 1
       break;
if flag == 1:   
    print(len(str)-i)

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