Remove all newlines from inside a string

I’m trying to remove all newline characters from a string. I’ve read up on how to do it, but it seems that I for some reason am unable to do so. Here is step by step what I am doing:

string1 = "Hello n World"
string2 = string1.strip('n')
print string2

And I’m still seeing the newline character in the output. I’ve tried with rstrip as well, but I’m still seeing the newline. Could anyone shed some light on why I’m doing this wrong? Thanks.

Answers:

Thank you for visiting the Q&A section on Magenaut. Please note that all the answers may not help you solve the issue immediately. So please treat them as advisements. If you found the post helpful (or not), leave a comment & I’ll get back to you as soon as possible.

Method 1

strip only removes characters from the beginning and end of a string. You want to use replace:

str2 = str.replace("n", "")
re.sub('s{2,}', ' ', str) # To remove more than one space

Method 2

As mentioned by @john, the most robust answer is:

string = "anbrv"
new_string = " ".join(string.splitlines())

Method 3

Answering late since I recently had the same question when reading text from file; tried several options such as:

with open('verdict.txt') as f:

First option below produces a list called alist, with 'n' stripped, then joins back into full text (optional if you wish to have only one text):

alist = f.read().splitlines()
jalist = " ".join(alist)

Second option below is much easier and simple produces string of text called atext replacing 'n' with space;

atext = f.read().replace('n',' ')

It works; I have done it. This is clean, easier, and efficient.

Method 4

strip() returns the string after removing leading and trailing whitespace. see doc

In your case, you may want to try replace():

string2 = string1.replace('n', '')

Method 5

or you can try this:

string1 = 'Hello n World'
tmp = string1.split()
string2 = ' '.join(tmp)

Method 6

This should work in many cases –

text = ' '.join([line.strip() for line in text.strip().splitlines() if line.strip()])
text = re.sub('[rn]+', ' ', text)

Method 7

strip() returns the string with leading and trailing whitespaces(by default) removed.

So it would turn " Hello World " to "Hello World", but it won’t remove the n character as it is present in between the string.

Try replace().

str = "Hello n World"
str2 = str.replace('n', '')
print str2

Method 8

If the file includes a line break in the middle of the text neither strip() nor rstrip() will not solve the problem,

strip family are used to trim from the began and the end of the string

replace() is the way to solve your problem

>>> my_name = "LandonnWO"
>>> print my_name
   Landon
   WO

>>> my_name = my_name.replace('n','')
>>> print my_name
LandonWO


All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0

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