Going Deeper with Strings
Read this for more on strings.
1. A string is a sequence
A string is a sequence of characters. You can access the characters one at a time with the bracket operator:
>>> fruit = 'banana' >>> letter = fruit[1]The second statement selects character number 1 from
fruit
and assigns it to letter
.
The expression in brackets is called an index. The index indicates which character in the sequence you want (hence the name).
But you might not get what you expect:
>>> letter 'a'For most people, the first letter of '
banana
' is b
, not a
. But for computer scientists, the index is an offset from the beginning of the string, and the offset of the first letter is zero.
>>> letter = fruit[0] >>> letter 'b'So
b
is the 0th letter (“zero-eth”) of 'banana
', a is the 1th letter (“one-eth”), and n is
the 2th letter (“two-eth”). As an index you can use an expression that contains variables and operators:
>>> i = 1 >>> fruit[i] 'a' >>> fruit[i+1] 'n'But the value of the index has to be an integer. Otherwise you get:
>>> letter = fruit[1.5] TypeError: string indices must be integers
Source: Author, Allen B. Downey http://greenteapress.com/thinkpython2/html/thinkpython2009.html
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