stripping punctuation from tuples
Alex Martelli
aleaxit at yahoo.com
Mon Mar 19 07:35:37 EST 2001
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Mon Mar 19 07:35:37 EST 2001
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"Louis Luangkesorn" <lluang at northwestern.edu> wrote in message news:3AB57F0C.594CF3E9 at northwestern.edu... > How do you strip the punctuation from tuples? In particular, say I have > a tuple a[10] (which happened to come from a not very well designed > database) > > >>> a[10] > ('Alan Tsang',) Note that, here, there is in fact no punctuation in the tuple a[10]. The parentheses and comma[s] are inserted by 'repr' (which is being implicitly called by the interactive interpreter to show you the results of expressions you type interactively). > How do I get something to say 'Alan Tsang' with out the parens or the > ',' a[10][0], the first and only element of the tuple, has this value. > Or, what I'm really trying to do is make this so > >>>b = breakname(a[10]) > >>>b[0], b[1] > > 'Alan','Tsang' If you know for sure that the tuple has exactly one item (or you know it has at least one, and only care about the first one), def breakname(atup): return atup[0].split() To work for any number of items in the tuple, e.g.: def breaknames(atup): return [ x for item in atup for x in item.split() ] Of course, if you use repr (implicitly or explicitly) to view the results of either function, you will see punctuation again, since repr will insert it for clarity:-). Alex
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