Boris Dušek wrote: > Hello, > > what is the use-case of parameter "start" in string's "endswith" > method? Consider the following minimal example: > > a = "testing" > suffix="ing" > a.endswith(suffix, 2) > > Significance of "end" is obvious. But not so for "start". > > Let's assume the "end" parameter is not used - then the function > should simple check that the last "len(suffix)" characters of "a" are > equal to "ing", no matter where we start (the function does not *scan* > the string from the "start", does it?) > Only case where it would make difference is if we had start + > len(suffix) < len(a) (excuse possible "of-by-one" error :-) > Then the function would never return True. But is there a real use > case when we would test for endswith like this? (knowing that it must > return false?) > > Thanks for any ideas/experience. > Boris >
Seems like a convenience I've never used. >>> a="abcdef" >>> a.endswith('cd',2,4) True >>> a[2:4].endswith('cd') True -Larry -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list