Split by the delimiter that comes first, Python - string

I have some unpredictable log lines that I'm trying to split.
The one thing I can predict is that the first field always ends with either a . or a :.
Is there any way I can automatically split the string at whichever delimiter comes first?

Look at the index of the . and : characters in the string using the index() function.
Here’s a simple implementation:
def index_default(line, char):
"""Returns the index of a character in a line, or the length of the string
if the character does not appear.
"""
try:
retval = line.index(char)
except ValueError:
retval = len(line)
return retval
def split_log_line(line):
"""Splits a line at either a period or a colon, depending on which appears
first in the line.
"""
if index_default(line, ".") < index_default(line, ":"):
return line.split(".")
else:
return line.split(":")
I wrapped the index() function in an index_default() function because if the line doesn’t contain a character, index() throws a ValueError, and I wasn’t sure if every line in your log would contain both a period and a colon.
And then here’s a quick example:
mylines = [
"line1.split at the dot",
"line2:split at the colon",
"line3:a colon preceded. by a dot",
"line4-neither a colon nor a dot"
]
for line in mylines:
print split_log_line(line)
which returns
['line1', 'split at the dot']
['line2', 'split at the colon']
['line3', 'a colon preceded. by a dot']
['line4-neither a colon nor a dot']

Check the indexes for both both characters, then use the lowest index to split your string.

Related

Is it possible to Split a Sentence into list of strings and Uppercase the list of Strings in same line?

For example:
I want to type this edit('Let's do this!') and get this ['LET'S', 'DO', 'THIS!'] answer.
This is my code thus far:
### START FUNCTION
def edit(sentence):
result = (sentence.split())
return result
### END FUNCTION
edit('Hello, how are you?')
Any solution on what to add in the middle code line "result = ..."
Sure, you can use a list comprehension to convert each word of the sentence to upper case.
def edit(sentence):
return [word.upper() for word in sentence.split()]
If you want the edit function to be a bit longer.. then it could be
def edit(sentence):
result = (sentence.split())
result = [word.upper() for word in result]
return result
Another method is to use the map function to apply the upper function to each item in the list.
result = list(map(str.upper,sentence.split()))
If you want to ignore punctuation, a regex could help you split the words and ignore non-word characters, for example
result = [word.group(0).upper() for word in re.finditer("([\w]+)(\W|$)", sentence)]

Max Length Removal

The problem is If there is “100” as a sub-string in the string, then we can delete this sub-string. The task is to find the length of longest sub-string which can be make removed?
s=input('')
i=0
if '100' not in s:
print('0')
else:
st=''
while i<len(s)-2:
if s[i:i+3]=='100':
s= s.replace('100','')
a=s.find('100')
if a<=i:
st=st+'100'
i=a
else:
st='100'
i=i+1
else:
i=i+1
print(len(st))
for the input: 101001010000,this code is printing 9 instead of 12,
somehow the else part is not getting executed..
please someone help me out
s.replace() removes all occurrences of the substring, not just the first, and searching from the start.
This means that '101001010000'.replace('100', '') replaces two occurrences:
>>> '101001010000'.replace('100', '')
'101000'
but you count that as one replacement.
str.replace() takes a third argument, the number of replacements to be made, see the documentation:
str.replace(old, new[, count])
Return a copy of the string with all occurrences of substring old replaced by new. If the optional argument count is given, only the first count occurrences are replaced.
Use that to limit the number of replacements.

Get only one word from line

How can I take only one word from a line in file and save it in some string variable?
For example my file has line "this, line, is, super" and I want to save only first word ("this") in variable word. I tried to read it character by character until I got on "," but I when I check it I got an error "Argument of type 'int' is not iterable". How can I make this?
line = file.readline() # reading "this, line, is, super"
if "," in len(line): # checking, if it contains ','
for i in line:
if "," not in line[i]: # while character is not ',' -> this is where I get error
word += line[i] # add it to my string
You can do it like this, using split():
line = file.readline()
if "," in line:
split_line = line.split(",")
first_word = split_line[0]
print(first_word)
split() will create a list where each element is, in your case, a word. Commas will not be included.
At a glance, you are on the right track but there are a few things wrong that you can decipher if you always consider what data type is being stored where. For instance, your conditional 'if "," in len(line)' doesn't make sense, because it translates to 'if "," in 21'. Secondly, you iterate over each character in line, but your value for i is not what you think. You want the index of the character at that point in your for loop, to check if "," is there, but line[i] is not something like line[0], as you would imagine, it is actually line['t']. It is easy to assume that i is always an integer or index in your string, but what you want is a range of integer values, equal to the length of the line, to iterate through, and to find the associated character at each index. I have reformatted your code to work the way you intended, returning word = "this", with these clarifications in mind. I hope you find this instructional (there are shorter ways and built-in methods to do this, but understanding indices is crucial in programming). Assuming line is the string "this, line, is, super":
if "," in line: # checking that the string, not the number 21, has a comma
for i in range(0, len(line)): # for each character in the range 0 -> 21
if line[i] != ",": # e.g. if line[0] does not equal comma
word += line[i] # add character to your string
else:
break # break out of loop when encounter first comma, thus storing only first word

Removing a string that startswith a specific char Python

text='I miss Wonderland #feeling sad #omg'
prefix=('#','#')
for line in text:
if line.startswith(prefix):
text=text.replace(line,'')
print(text)
The output should be:
'I miss Wonderland'
But my output is the original string with the prefix removed
So it seems that you do not in fact want to remove the whole "string" or "line", but rather the word? Then you'll want to split your string into words:
words = test.split(' ')
And now iterate through each element in words, performing your check on the first letter. Lastly, combine these elements back into one string:
result = ""
for word in words:
if !word.startswith(prefix):
result += (word + " ")
for line in text in your case will iterate over each character in the text, not each word. So when it gets to e.g., '#' in '#feeling', it will remove the #, but 'feeling' will remain because none of the other characters in that string start with/are '#' or '#'. You can confirm that your code is going character by character by doing:
for line in text:
print(line)
Try the following instead, which does the filtering in a single line:
text = 'I miss Wonderland #feeling sad #omg'
prefix = ('#','#')
words = text.split() # Split the text into a list of its individual words.
# Join only those words that don't start with prefix
print(' '.join([word for word in words if not word.startswith(prefix)]))

remove the item in string

How do I remove the other stuff in the string and return a list that is made of other strings ? This is what I have written. Thanks in advance!!!
def get_poem_lines(poem):
r""" (str) -> list of str
Return the non-blank, non-empty lines of poem, with whitespace removed
from the beginning and end of each line.
>>> get_poem_lines('The first line leads off,\n\n\n'
... + 'With a gap before the next.\nThen the poem ends.\n')
['The first line leads off,', 'With a gap before the next.', 'Then the poem ends.']
"""
list=[]
for line in poem:
if line == '\n' and line == '+':
poem.remove(line)
s = poem.remove(line)
for a in s:
list.append(a)
return list
split and strip might be what you need:
s = 'The first line leads off,\n\n\n With a gap before the next.\nThen the poem ends.\n'
print([line.strip() for line in s.split("\n") if line])
['The first line leads off,', 'With a gap before the next.', 'Then the poem ends.']
Not sure where the + fits in as it is, if it is involved somehow either strip or str.replace it, also avoid using list as a variable name, it shadows the python list.
lastly strings have no remove method, you can .replace but since strings are immutable you will need to reassign the poem to the the return value of replace i.e poem = poem.replace("+","")
You can read all non-empty lines like this:
list_m = [line if line not in ["\n","\r\n"] for line in file];
Without looking at your input sample, I am assuming that you simply want your white spaces to be removed. In that case,
for x in range(0, len(list_m)):
list_m[x] = list_m[x].replace("[ ](?=\n)", "");

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