Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Strings The Basics. Strings a collection data type can refer to a string variable as one variable or as many different components (characters) string.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Strings The Basics. Strings a collection data type can refer to a string variable as one variable or as many different components (characters) string."— Presentation transcript:

1 Strings The Basics

2 Strings a collection data type can refer to a string variable as one variable or as many different components (characters) string values are delimited by either single quotes or double quotes operators + and * (overloaded operators) + “concatenation” sticks two strings together to get a new string * “replication” repeats a string a given number of times to give a new string precedence is * above + order of concatenation matters! “a” + “b” is not the same as “b” + “a”

3 Indexing Also called subscripts A way to tell individual characters of a string apart notation like that used for lists [ ] with an integer (constant or variable) inside Strings are numbered from 0 on left end and increasing Strings are also numbered from -1 on right end and decreasing You can use an expression as an index also, like str[k + 1], as long as the expression has an integer value

4 The len function Note this is a function, not a method (do not call it with the dot notation) len operates on one argument, either a string or a list returns an integer result, tells how many characters are in the string or how many elements are in the list lowest return value is zero for the empty string Python claims “no upper limit on string length”, literally it depends on your environment – how much RAM you have, which OS you are running, on a typical PC today with Windows it is around 2 billion characters s[len(s)] would give an error! Remember that len tells you how many characters, not what the last subscript in the string would be

5 chr and ord functions Sometimes you need to work with the ASCII codes of individual characters chr(integer) will return the character corresponding to the ASCII code argument, example chr(65) will return “A” ord(char) will return the ASCII code (as an integer) of the single character that you send, example ord(“A”) will return 65 In general, use the characters instead of their ASCII values in coding, it will be much more obvious what you are doing Do NOT say “if ch >= 65 and ch <= 90” when you are checking for upper case it is MUCH better to say if ch >= “A” and ch <=“Z” or even if ch in ascii_uppercase or if ch.isupper()

6 The slice operator The “substring” operator in Python See separate set of slides


Download ppt "Strings The Basics. Strings a collection data type can refer to a string variable as one variable or as many different components (characters) string."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google