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String Methods

Python provides a set of built-in methods that we can use to alter and modify the strings.

upper():

The upper() method converts a string to upper case.

Example:

str1 = "AbcDEfghIJ"
print(str1.upper())

Output:

ABCDEFGHIJ

lower():

The lower() method converts a string to lower case.

Example:

str1 = "AbcDEfghIJ"
print(str1.lower())

Output:

abcdefghij

strip():

The strip() method removes any white spaces before and after the string.

Example:

str2 = " Silver Spoon "
print(str2.strip())

Output:

Silver Spoon

rstrip():

The rstrip() removes any trailing characters.

Example:

str3 = "Hello !!!"
print(str3.rstrip("!"))

Output:

Hello

replace():

The replace() method replaces a string with another string.

Example:

str2 = "Silver Spoon"
print(str2.replace("Sp", "M"))

Output:

Silver Moon

split():

The split() method splits the given string at the specified instance and returns the separated strings as list items.

Example:

str2 = "Silver Spoon"
print(str2.split(" "))  # Splits the string at the whitespace " ".

Output:

['Silver', 'Spoon']

There are various other string methods that we can use to modify our strings.

capitalize():

The capitalize() method turns only the first character of the string to uppercase and the rest other characters of the string are turned to lowercase. The string has no effect if the first character is already uppercase.

Example:

str1 = "hello"
capStr1 = str1.capitalize()
print(capStr1)
str2 = "hello WorlD"
capStr2 = str2.capitalize()
print(capStr2)

Output:

Hello
Hello world

center():

The center() method aligns the string to the center as per the parameters given by the user.

Example:

str1 = "Welcome to the Console!!!"
print(str1.center(50))

Output:

            Welcome to the Console!!!

We can also provide a padding character. It will fill the rest of the fill characters provided by the user.

Example:

str1 = "Welcome to the Console!!!"
print(str1.center(50, "."))

Output:

............Welcome to the Console!!!.............

count():

The count() method returns the number of times the given value has occurred within the given string.

Example:

str2 = "Abracadabra"
countStr = str2.count("a")
print(countStr)

Output:

4

endswith():

The endswith() method checks if the string ends with a given value. If yes, then return True, else return False.

Example 1:

str1 = "Welcome to the Console !!!"
print(str1.endswith("!!!"))

Output:

True

Example 2:

str1 = "Welcome to the Console !!!"
print(str1.endswith("Console"))

Output:

False

We can even also check for a value in-between the string by providing start and end index positions.

Example:

str1 = "Welcome to the Console !!!"
print(str1.endswith("to", 4, 10))

Output:

True

find():

The find() method searches for the first occurrence of the given value and returns the index where it is present. If the given value is absent from the string, then return -1.

Example:

str1 = "He's name is Dan. He is an honest man."
print(str1.find("is"))

Output:

10

As we can see, this method is somewhat similar to the index() method. The major difference being that index() raises an exception if the value is absent whereas find() does not.

Example:

str1 = "He's name is Dan. He is an honest man."
print(str1.find("Daniel"))

Output:

-1

index():

The index() method searches for the first occurrence of the given value and returns the index where it is present. If the given value is absent from the string, then raise an exception.

Example:

str1 = "He's name is Dan. Dan is an honest man."
print(str1.index("Dan"))

Output:

13

As we can see, this method is somewhat similar to the find() method. The major difference being that index() raises an exception if the value is absent whereas find() does not.

Example:

str1 = "He's name is Dan. Dan is an honest man."
print(str1.index("Daniel"))

Output:

ValueError: substring not found

isalnum():

The isalnum() method returns True only if the entire string only consists of A-Z, a-z, 0-9. If any other characters or punctuations are present, then it returns False.

Example 1:

str1 = "WelcomeToTheConsole"
print(str1.isalnum())

Output:

True

Example 2:

str1 = "Welcome To The Console"
print(str1.isalnum())
str2 = "Hurray!!!"
print(str2.isalnum())

Output:

False
False

isalpha():

The isalpha() method returns True only if the entire string only consists of A-Z, a-z. If any other characters or punctuations or numbers (0-9) are present, then it returns False.

Example 1:

str1 = "Welcome"
print(str1.isalpha())

Output:

True

Example 2:

str1 = "I'm 18 years old"
print(str1.isalpha())
str2 = "Hurray!!!"
print(str2.isalpha())

Output:

False
False

islower():

The islower() method returns True if all the characters in the string are lower case, else it returns False.

Example 1:

str1 = "hello world"
print(str1.islower())

Output:

True

Example 2:

str1 = "welcome Mike"
print(str1.islower())
str2 = "Hurray!!!"
print(str2.islower())

Output:

False
False

isprintable():

The isprintable() method returns True if all the values within the given string are printable, if not, then return False.

Example 1:

str1 = "We wish you a Merry Christmas"
print(str1.isprintable())

Output:

True

Example 2:

str2 = "Hello, \t\t.Mike"
print(str2.isprintable())

Output:

False

isspace():

The isspace() method returns True only and only if the string contains white spaces, else returns False.

Example 1:

str1 = "        "  # using Spacebar
print(str1.isspace())
str2 = "        "  # using Tab
print(str2.isspace())

Output:

True
True

Example 2:

str1 = "Hello World"
print(str1.isspace())

Output:

False

istitle():

The istitle() returns True only if the first letter of each word of the string is capitalized, else it returns False.

Example 1:

str1 = "World Health Organization"
print(str1.istitle())

Output:

True

Example 2:

str2 = "To kill a Mocking bird"
print(str2.istitle())

Output:

False

isupper():

The isupper() method returns True if all the characters in the string are upper case, else it returns False.

Example 1:

str1 = "WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION"
print(str1.isupper())

Output:

True

Example 2:

str2 = "To kill a Mocking bird"
print(str2.isupper())

Output:

False

replace():

The replace() method can be used to replace a part of the original string with another string.

Example:

str1 = "Python is a Compiled Language."
print(str1.replace("Compiled", "Interpreted"))

Output:

Python is a Interpreted Language.

startswith():

The startswith() method checks if the string starts with a given value. If yes, then return True, else return False.

Example 1:

str1 = "Python is a Interpreted Language"
print(str1.startswith("Python"))

Output:

True

Example 2:

str1 = "Python is a Interpreted Language"
print(str1.startswith("a"))

Output:

False

We can even also check for a value in-between the string by providing start and end index positions.

Example:

str1 = "Python is a Interpreted Language"
print(str1.startswith("Inter", 12, 20))

Output:

True

swapcase():

The swapcase() method changes the character casing of the string. Upper case are converted to lower case and lower case to upper case.

Example:

str1 = "Python is a Interpreted Language"
print(str1.swapcase())

Output:

pYTHON IS A iNTERPRETED lANGUAGE

title():

The title() method capitalizes each letter of the word within the string.

Example:

str1 = "He's name is Dan. Dan is an honest man."
print(str1.title())

Output:

He'S Name Is Dan. Dan Is An Honest Man.