On Mon, Jul 21, 2008 at 9:44 AM, Monika Jisswel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > instead of s='e:\mm tests\1. exp files\5.MOC-1012.exp' > try to use : s = r'e:\mm tests\1. exp files\5.MOC-1012.exp'.replace( > '\\', '\\\\') > for me here is what it gives: > >>>> s = r'e:\mm tests\1. exp files\5.MOC-1012.exp'.replace('\\', '\\\\') >>>> print s > e:\\mm tests\\1. exp files\\5.MOC-1012.exp >>>> s.split('\\\\') > ['e:', 'mm tests', '1. exp files', '5.MOC-1012.exp'] > > > why \\ i you only have one \ ? : you need to escape it because its a > special character to the python interpreter. > > > the r character is important in the expression s = r'e:\mm tests\1. exp > files\5.MOC-1012.exp'.replace('\\', '\\\\') because it tells the interpreter > to take the string as RAW and thus leave it unchanged even if it contains > special characters that should actually be treated special. > > now to use the r or not to use it ? when to use it ? how to use it ? I > always use it ! & always had the result I expected, so I would suggest you > use it always too specialy with the re module, ofcourse unless the result is > not satisaying you, > > so this code (using r this time works too) : > >>>> s = r'e:\mm tests\1. exp files\5.MOC-1012.exp'.replace(r'\\', r'\\\\') >>>> print s > e:\\mm tests\\1. exp files\\5.MOC-1012.exp >>>> s.split('\\\\') > ['e:', 'mm tests', '1. exp files', '5.MOC-1012.exp'] > > _______________________________________________ > Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor > --------------------
Thanks, I am aware of goodies that raw string offers, but my question was how to use it with variable that already contains string. :) _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor