Python Language String: Difference between revisions

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s1 = 'abc'
s1 = 'abc'
s2 = "xyz"
s2 = "xyz"
</syntaxhighlight>
Declaring string literals bounded by single and double quotes is equivalent. There are two types of quotes to make it possible to create strings that include single and double quotes: a single-quoted string allows specifying double quotes inside and a double-quoted string allows specifying single quotes inside:
<syntaxhighlight lang='py'>
s1 = 'the color is "red"'
s2 = "the shape is 'square'"
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>



Revision as of 19:17, 18 June 2022

Internal

Overview

String are a Python sequence of characters. Strings are immutable, a string cannot be changed in-place. Python 3 supports the Unicode standard, so Python 3 strings can contain characters from any written language in the world.

Quotes

String literals can be declared using four type of quotes: sigle quotes '...', double quotes "...", triple single quotes '''...''' and triple double quotes """...""".

Single and Double Quotes

s1 = 'abc'
s2 = "xyz"

Declaring string literals bounded by single and double quotes is equivalent. There are two types of quotes to make it possible to create strings that include single and double quotes: a single-quoted string allows specifying double quotes inside and a double-quoted string allows specifying single quotes inside:

s1 = 'the color is "red"'
s2 = "the shape is 'square'"

The [] Operator and String Slices

The [] operator can be used to read strings from the sequence, but not modify the sequence. Because strings are immutable, an attempt to change a character at a specific position in string will throw an TypeError exception:

s = 'abc'
s[0] = 'x'
[...]
TypeError: 'str' object does not support item assignment

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