Delete Chars in Python

偶尔善良 提交于 2019-12-02 01:45:28
SilentGhost

if you're asking about an abstract string and not url you could go with:

>>> astring ="http://google.com/translate_t"
>>> astring.rpartition('/')[0]
http://google.com

For urls, using urlparse:

>>> import urlparse
>>> parts = urlparse.urlsplit('http://google.com/path/to/resource?query=spam#anchor')
>>> parts
('http', 'google.com', '/path/to/resource', 'query=spam', 'anchor')
>>> urlparse.urlunsplit((parts[0], parts[1], '', '', ''))
'http://google.com'

For arbitrary strings, using re:

>>> import re
>>> re.split(r'\b/\b', 'http://google.com/path/to/resource', 1)
['http://google.com', 'path/to/resource']
str="http://google.com/translate_t"
shortened=str[0:str.rfind("/")]

Should do it. str[a:b] returns a substring in python. And rfind is used to find the index of a character sequence, starting at the end of the string.

If you know the position of the character then you can use the slice syntax to to create a new string:

In [2]: s1 = "abc123"
In [3]: s2 = s1[:3]
In [4]: print s2
abc

To find the position you can use the find() or index() methods of strings. The split() and partition() methods may be useful, too. Those methods are documented in the Python docs for sequences.

To remove a part of a string is imposible because strings are immutable.

If you want to process URLs then you should definitely use the urlparse library. It lets you split an URL into its parts. If you just want remove a part of the file path then you will have to do that still by yourself.

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