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Lstrip, rstrip and strip remove characters from the left, right and both ends of a string respectively

By default they remove whitespace characters (space, tabs, linebreaks, etc) Without strip (), bananas is present in the dictionary but with an empty string as value With strip (), this code will throw an exception because it strips the tab of the banana line. I want to eliminate all the whitespace from a string, on both ends, and in between words I have this python code Sentence = ' hello apple ' sentence.strip() but that

I was told it deletes whitespace but s = ss asdas vsadsafas asfasasgas print(s.strip()) prints out ss asdas vsadsafas asfasasgas shouldn't it be ssasdasvsadsafasasfasasgas? The string.strip (), string.stripleading (), and string.striptrailing () methods trim white space [as determined by character.iswhitespace ()] off either the front, back, or both front and back of the targeted string. The method strip () returns a copy of the string in which all chars have been stripped from the beginning and the end of the string (default whitespace characters) So, it trims whitespace from begining and end of a string if no input char is specified At this point, it just controls whether string x is empty or not without considering spaces because an empty string is interpreted as false in. List = map(str.strip, list) this will apply the function str.strip to every element in list, return a new list, and store the result back in list.

3 just to add a few examples to jim's answer, according to.strip() docs

Return a copy of the string with the leading and trailing characters removed The chars argument is a string specifying the set of characters to be removed If omitted or none, the chars argument defaults to removing whitespace. I know.strip() returns a copy of the string in which all chars have been stripped from the beginning and the end of the string But i wonder why / if it is necessary. Here are examples for mac, windows, and unix eol characters.

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