Course Content
String Manipulation in Python
String Manipulation in Python
Joining
In two previous chapters, we considered methods that split a string into a list. Now we will learn the method that will do the opposite thing.
To join all the elements of iterable object obj
(like tuple, list, dictionary or set) use the following syntax: separator.join(obj)
, where separator
is the string used to separate objects for join. If obj
is dictionary, then its keys will be joined. For example,
print(", ".join(['Python', 'R', 'SQL'])) print(" - ".join(('1', '2', '3')))
Swipe to show code editor
You are given the list of strings splitted_string
. You need to join these strings separated by dot and space into one sentence.
Thanks for your feedback!
Joining
In two previous chapters, we considered methods that split a string into a list. Now we will learn the method that will do the opposite thing.
To join all the elements of iterable object obj
(like tuple, list, dictionary or set) use the following syntax: separator.join(obj)
, where separator
is the string used to separate objects for join. If obj
is dictionary, then its keys will be joined. For example,
print(", ".join(['Python', 'R', 'SQL'])) print(" - ".join(('1', '2', '3')))
Swipe to show code editor
You are given the list of strings splitted_string
. You need to join these strings separated by dot and space into one sentence.
Thanks for your feedback!
Joining
In two previous chapters, we considered methods that split a string into a list. Now we will learn the method that will do the opposite thing.
To join all the elements of iterable object obj
(like tuple, list, dictionary or set) use the following syntax: separator.join(obj)
, where separator
is the string used to separate objects for join. If obj
is dictionary, then its keys will be joined. For example,
print(", ".join(['Python', 'R', 'SQL'])) print(" - ".join(('1', '2', '3')))
Swipe to show code editor
You are given the list of strings splitted_string
. You need to join these strings separated by dot and space into one sentence.
Thanks for your feedback!
In two previous chapters, we considered methods that split a string into a list. Now we will learn the method that will do the opposite thing.
To join all the elements of iterable object obj
(like tuple, list, dictionary or set) use the following syntax: separator.join(obj)
, where separator
is the string used to separate objects for join. If obj
is dictionary, then its keys will be joined. For example,
print(", ".join(['Python', 'R', 'SQL'])) print(" - ".join(('1', '2', '3')))
Swipe to show code editor
You are given the list of strings splitted_string
. You need to join these strings separated by dot and space into one sentence.