Python strings and coding conventions
Robert Kern
robert.kern at gmail.com
Sat Jan 10 23:26:46 EST 2009
koranthala at gmail.com wrote:
> Hi,
> Python Coding Convention (PEP 8) suggests :
> Maximum Line Length
>
> Limit all lines to a maximum of 79 characters.
>
> I have a string which is ~110 char long. It is a string which I am
> going to print in a text file as a single string.
> i.e. in that text file, each line is taken as a different record -
> so it has to be in a single line.
>
> Now, how can I write this code - while following PEP 8?
> I tried blockstrings, but as shown in the example below:
>>>> s = r'''
> ... abcd
> ... efgh
> ... '''
>>>> s
> '\nabcd\nefgh\n'
> it has "\n" inserted - which will disallow printing it to a single
> line.
>
> I thought about other options like concatenating strings etc, but
> it seems very kludgy - esp since the whole string has a single meaning
> and cannot be easily split to many logically. Then I thought of
> creating a blockstring and then removing "\n", but it seemed
> kludgier...
I usually use implicit concatenation:
s = ('some long text that '
'needs to be split')
--
Robert Kern
"I have come to believe that the whole world is an enigma, a harmless enigma
that is made terrible by our own mad attempt to interpret it as though it had
an underlying truth."
-- Umberto Eco
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