Simon Forman wrote: > f pemberton wrote: > > Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch wrote: > > > In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, f pemberton > > > wrote: > > > > > > > I've tried using replace but its not working for me. > > > > xdata.replace('abcdef', 'highway') > > > > xdata.replace('defgef', 'news') > > > > xdata.replace('effwer', 'monitor') > > > > > > `replace()` does not work in place. You have to bind the result to a name > > > like:: > > > > > > xdata = xdata.replace('abcdef', 'highway') > > > > > > Ciao, > > > Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch > > > > lol, you probably will not believe me but I actually knew that already. > > I just forgot to add that part in my original post. When I try and > > replace what happens is the first replace works fine but when I try and > > do a second replace on a different part of the same string, the program > > will print the string a second time(which I do not want). > > Um, don't print the string until after you're done replacing? :-) > > Seriously though, since there are no print statements, etc.., in your > posted code, it's hard to understand exactly what your problem is. > > > How can you > > do 2 or more replaces in one line of code? > > In any event, there is a neat method of "single-pass multiple string > substitution using a dictionary" here: > http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/81330 It uses > a regular expression, so I'd guess it wouldn't be to hard to get it to > work in multiline mode. > > Peace, > ~Simon
Or just: xdata = xdata.replace('abcdef', 'highway').replace('defgef', 'news').replace('effwer', 'monitor') Hahahahaha ~Simon -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list