[Tutor] working with strings in python3
Westley MartÃnez
anikom15 at gmail.com
Mon Apr 18 23:26:23 EDT 2011
On Tue, 2011-04-19 at 02:16 +0000, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Tue, 19 Apr 2011 10:34:27 +1000, James Mills wrote:
>
> > Normally it's considered bad practise to concatenate strings.
>
> *Repeatedly*.
>
> There's nothing wrong with concatenating (say) two or three strings.
> What's a bad idea is something like:
>
>
> s = ''
> while condition:
> s += "append stuff to end"
>
> Even worse:
>
> s = ''
> while condition:
> s = "insert stuff at beginning" + s
>
> because that defeats the runtime optimization (CPython only!) that
> *sometimes* can alleviate the badness of repeated string concatenation.
>
> See Joel on Software for more:
>
> http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000319.html
>
> But a single concatenation is more or less equally efficient as string
> formatting operations (and probably more efficient, because you don't
> have the overheard of parsing the format mini-language).
>
> For repeated concatenation, the usual idiom is to collect all the
> substrings in a list, then join them all at once at the end:
>
> pieces = []
> while condition:
> pieces.append('append stuff at end')
> s = ''.join(pieces)
>
>
>
>
> --
> Steven
Thanks Steven, I was about to ask for an efficient way to concatenate an
arbitrary amount of strings.
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