I have a set of strings set1, and all the strings in set1 have a two specific substrings which I don't need and want to remove.
Sample Input:set1={'Apple.good','Orange.good','Pear.bad','Pear.good','Banana.bad','Potato.bad'}
So basically I want the .good and .bad substrings removed from all the strings.
What I tried:
for x in set1: x.replace('.good','') x.replace('.bad','')But this doesn't seem to work at all. There is absolutely no change in the output and it is the same as the input. I tried using for x in list(set1) instead of the original one but that doesn't change anything.
9 Answers
Strings are immutable. str.replace creates a new string. This is stated in the documentation:
str.replace(old, new[, count])Return a copy of the string with all occurrences of substring old replaced by new. [...]
This means you have to re-allocate the set or re-populate it (re-allocating is easier with a set comprehension):
new_set = {x.replace('.good', '').replace('.bad', '') for x in set1}1NOTE: If you intend to change prefix or suffix
str.removeprefix('prefix')str.removesuffix('suffix')respectively should be used.
>>> x = 'Pear.good'
>>> y = x.replace('.good','')
>>> y
'Pear'
>>> x
'Pear.good'.replace doesn't change the string, it returns a copy of the string with the replacement. You can't change the string directly because strings are immutable.
You need to take the return values from x.replace and put them in a new set.
In Python 3.9+ you could remove the suffix using str.removesuffix('mysuffix'). From the docs:
If the string ends with the suffix string and that suffix is not empty, return
string[:-len(suffix)]. Otherwise, return a copy of the original string
So you can either create a new empty set and add each element without the suffix to it:
set1 = {'Apple.good', 'Orange.good', 'Pear.bad', 'Pear.good', 'Banana.bad', 'Potato.bad'}
set2 = set()
for s in set1: set2.add(s.removesuffix(".good").removesuffix(".bad"))Or create the new set using a set comprehension:
set2 = {s.removesuffix(".good").removesuffix(".bad") for s in set1}
print(set2)Output:
{'Orange', 'Pear', 'Apple', 'Banana', 'Potato'} 0 All you need is a bit of black magic!
>>> a = ["cherry.bad","pear.good", "apple.good"]
>>> a = list(map(lambda x: x.replace('.good','').replace('.bad',''),a))
>>> a
['cherry', 'pear', 'apple'] When there are multiple substrings to remove, one simple and effective option is to use re.sub with a compiled pattern that involves joining all the substrings-to-remove using the regex OR (|) pipe.
import re
to_remove = ['.good', '.bad']
strings = ['Apple.good','Orange.good','Pear.bad']
p = re.compile('|'.join(map(re.escape, to_remove))) # escape to handle metachars
[p.sub('', s) for s in strings]
# ['Apple', 'Orange', 'Pear'] You could do this:
import re
import string
set1={'Apple.good','Orange.good','Pear.bad','Pear.good','Banana.bad','Potato.bad'}
for x in set1: x.replace('.good',' ') x.replace('.bad',' ') x = re.sub('\.good$', '', x) x = re.sub('\.bad$', '', x) print(x) 6 # practices 2
str = "Amin Is A Good Programmer"
new_set = str.replace('Good', '')
print(new_set)
print : Amin Is A Programmer 6 I did the test (but it is not your example) and the data does not return them orderly or complete
>>> ind = ['p5','p1','p8','p4','p2','p8']
>>> newind = {x.replace('p','') for x in ind}
>>> newind
{'1', '2', '8', '5', '4'}I proved that this works:
>>> ind = ['p5','p1','p8','p4','p2','p8']
>>> newind = [x.replace('p','') for x in ind]
>>> newind
['5', '1', '8', '4', '2', '8']or
>>> newind = []
>>> ind = ['p5','p1','p8','p4','p2','p8']
>>> for x in ind:
... newind.append(x.replace('p',''))
>>> newind
['5', '1', '8', '4', '2', '8'] If list
I was doing something for a list which is a set of strings and you want to remove all lines that have a certain substring you can do this
import re
def RemoveInList(sub,LinSplitUnOr): indices = [i for i, x in enumerate(LinSplitUnOr) if re.search(sub, x)] A = [i for j, i in enumerate(LinSplitUnOr) if j not in indices] return Awhere sub is a patter that you do not wish to have in a list of lines LinSplitUnOr
for example
A=['Apple.good','Orange.good','Pear.bad','Pear.good','Banana.bad','Potato.bad']
sub = 'good'
A=RemoveInList(sub,A)Then A will be