On Jan 11, 9:26 am, Robert Kern <robert.k...@gmail.com> wrote: > koranth...@gmail.com wrote: > > Hi, > > Python Coding Convention (PEP 8) suggests : > > Maximum Line Length > > > Limit all lines to a maximum of 79 characters. > > > I have a string which is ~110 char long. It is a string which I am > > going to print in a text file as a single string. > > i.e. in that text file, each line is taken as a different record - > > so it has to be in a single line. > > > Now, how can I write this code - while following PEP 8? > > I tried blockstrings, but as shown in the example below: > >>>> s = r''' > > ... abcd > > ... efgh > > ... ''' > >>>> s > > '\nabcd\nefgh\n' > > it has "\n" inserted - which will disallow printing it to a single > > line. > > > I thought about other options like concatenating strings etc, but > > it seems very kludgy - esp since the whole string has a single meaning > > and cannot be easily split to many logically. Then I thought of > > creating a blockstring and then removing "\n", but it seemed > > kludgier... > > I usually use implicit concatenation: > > s = ('some long text that ' > 'needs to be split') > > -- > Robert Kern > > "I have come to believe that the whole world is an enigma, a harmless enigma > that is made terrible by our own mad attempt to interpret it as though it > had > an underlying truth." > -- Umberto Eco
This is a very good method. I found another method too - on further investigation >>> s = "abc\ ... efg" >>> s 'abcefg' Only problem being that it doesnt support indentation. So, implicit concatenation it is... -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list