HMS Surprise wrote: > The string s below has single and double qoutes in it. For testing I > surrounded it with triple single quotes. I want to split off the > portion before the first \, but my split that works with shorter > strings does not seem to work with this one. > > Ideas? > > Thanks, > jvh > > s = ''''D132258\',\'\', > \'status=no,location=no,width=630,height=550,left=200,top=100\')" > target="_blank" class="dvLink" title="Send an Email to selected > employee">''' > > t = s.split('\\') > That can't work because there are no \'s in your string. There are backslashes in your program to escape some of the characters from being meaningful to the python interpreter. However, once the string is parsed and created, it has no backslashes in it. To see this, just print it or use find on it:
>>> s = ''''D132258\',\'\', ... \'status=no,location=no,width=630,height=550,left=200,top=100\')" ... target="_blank" class="dvLink" title="Send an Email to selected ... employee">''' >>> print s 'D132258','', 'status=no,location=no,width=630,height=550,left=200,top=100')" target="_blank" class="dvLink" title="Send an Email to selected employee"> >>> s.find('\\') -1 So the question now becomes: Where do you really want to split it? If at the comma then one of these will work for you: >>> print s.split(',')[0] 'D132258' >>> i = s.index(',') >>> print s[:i] 'D132258' Gary Herron -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list