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Predavanje08 PDF

Strings are immutable sequences that can be manipulated using various operations and methods. The chapter discusses accessing individual characters, concatenating strings, slicing substrings, searching and testing strings, and common string methods like lower, upper, find, replace, and split. Programmers have many tools for examining, modifying, and manipulating strings in Python.

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Safet Dacić
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
88 views

Predavanje08 PDF

Strings are immutable sequences that can be manipulated using various operations and methods. The chapter discusses accessing individual characters, concatenating strings, slicing substrings, searching and testing strings, and common string methods like lower, upper, find, replace, and split. Programmers have many tools for examining, modifying, and manipulating strings in Python.

Uploaded by

Safet Dacić
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CHAPTER 8

More About
Strings
Topics
• Basic String Operations
• String Slicing
• Testing, Searching, and Manipulating
Strings
Basic String Operations
• Many types of programs perform
operations on strings
• In Python, many tools for examining
and manipulating strings
• Strings are sequences, so many of the tools
that work with sequences work with strings
Accessing the Individual
Characters in a String
• To access an individual character in a
string:
Use a for loop
• Format: for character in string:
• Useful when need to iterate over the whole string,
such as to count the occurrences of a specific
character
Use indexing
• Each character has an index specifying its position
in the string, starting at 0
• Format: character = my_string[i]
Accessing the Individual
Characters in a String (cont’d.)
Accessing the Individual
Characters in a String (cont’d.)
• IndexError exception will occur if:
• You try to use an index that is out of range for
the string
Likely to happen when loop iterates beyond the
end of the string
• len(string) function can be used to
obtain the length of a string
Useful to prevent loops from iterating beyond
the end of a string
String Concatenation
• Concatenation: appending one string to
the end of another string
Use the + operator to produce a string that is
a combination of its operands
The augmented assignment operator += can
also be used to concatenate strings
• The operand on the left side of the += operator
must be an existing variable; otherwise, an
exception is raised
Strings Are Immutable
• Strings are immutable
Once they are created, they cannot be
changed
• Concatenation doesn’t actually change the existing
string, but rather creates a new string and assigns
the new string to the previously used variable
Cannot use an expression of the form
string[index] = new_character
• Statement of this type will raise an exception
Strings Are Immutable
(cont’d.)
String Slicing
• Slice: span of items taken from a
sequence, known as substring
Slicing format: string[start : end]
• Expression will return a string containing a copy of
the characters from start up to, but not including,
end
• If start not specified, 0 is used for start index
• If end not specified, len(string) is used for end
index
Slicing expressions can include a step value
and negative indexes relative to end of string
Testing, Searching, and
Manipulating Strings
• You can use the in operator to
determine whether one string is
contained in another string
General format: string1 in string2
• string1 and string2 can be string literals or
variables referencing strings
• Similarly you can use the not in
operator to determine whether one
string is not contained in another string
String Methods
• Strings in Python have many types of
methods, divided into different types of
operations
General format:
mystring.method(arguments)
• Some methods test a string for specific
characteristics
Generally Boolean methods, that return True
if a condition exists, and False otherwise
String Methods (cont’d.)
String Methods (cont’d.)
• Some methods return a copy of the
string, to which modifications have
been made
• Simulate strings as mutable objects
• String comparisons are case-sensitive
• Uppercase characters are distinguished from
lowercase characters
• lower and upper methods can be used for
making case-insensitive string comparisons
String Methods (cont’d.)
String Methods (cont’d.)
• Programs commonly need to search for
substrings
• Several methods to accomplish this:
• endswith(substring): checks if the string
ends with substring
• Returns True or False
• startswith(substring): checks if the
string starts with substring
• Returns True or False
String Methods (cont’d.)
• Several methods to accomplish this
(cont’d):
• find(substring): searches for
substring within the string
• Returns lowest index of the substring, or if the
substring is not contained in the string, returns -1
• replace(substring, new_string):
• Returns a copy of the string where every
occurrence of substring is replaced with
new_string
String Methods (cont’d.)
The Repetition Operator
• Repetition operator: makes multiple
copies of a string and joins them
together
The * symbol is a repetition operator when
applied to a string and an integer
• String is left operand; number is right
General format: string_to_copy * n
Variable references a new string which
contains multiple copies of the original string
Splitting a String
• split method: returns a list containing
the words in the string
• By default, uses space as separator
• Can specify a different separator by passing it
as an argument to the split method
Summary
• This chapter covered:
• String operations, including:
• Methods for iterating over strings
• Repetition and concatenation operators
• Strings as immutable objects
• Slicing strings and testing strings
• String methods
• Splitting a string

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