printing double quotes around a variable

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闹比i
闹比i 2020-11-29 11:50

For instance, we have:

word = \'Some Random Word\'
print \'\"\' + word + \'\"\'

is there a better way to print double quotes around a varia

7条回答
  •  -上瘾入骨i
    2020-11-29 12:51

    Update :

    From Python 3.6, you can use f-strings

    >>> print(f'"{word}"')
    "Some Random Word"
    

    Original Answer :

    You can try %-formatting

    >>> print('"%s"' % word)
    "Some Random Word"
    

    OR str.format

    >>> print('"{}"'.format(word))
    "Some Random Word"
    

    OR escape the quote character with \

    >>> print("\"%s\"" % word)
    "Some Random Word"
    

    And, if the double-quotes is not a restriction (i.e. single-quotes would do)

    >>> from pprint import pprint, pformat
    >>> print(pformat(word))
    'Some Random Word'
    >>> pprint(word)
    'Some Random Word'
    

    OR like others have already said (include it in your declaration)

    >>> word = '"Some Random Word"'
    >>> print(word)
    "Some Random Word"
    

    Use whichever you feel to be better or less confusing.

    And, if you need to do it for multiple words, you might as well create a function

    def double_quote(word):
        return '"%s"' % word
    
    print(double_quote(word), double_quote(word2))
    

    And (if you know what you're doing &) if you're concerned about performance of these, see this comparison.

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