Hi, Thanks for this!
So, is there a copy function/method that returns a MutableString like in objective-C? I’ve solved this problems before in a number of languages like Objective-C and AppleScript. Basically there is a set of common characters that need “normalizing” and I have a method that replaces them in a string, so: myString = [myString normalizeCharacters]; Would return a new string with all the “common” replacements applied. Since the following gives an error : myString = 'Hello' myNewstring = myString.replace(myString,'e','a’) TypeError: 'str' object cannot be interpreted as an integer I can’t see of a way to do this in Python? All the Best Dave > On 8 Jun 2022, at 10:14, Chris Angelico <ros...@gmail.com> wrote: > > On Wed, 8 Jun 2022 at 18:12, Dave <d...@looktowindward.com> wrote: > >> I tried the but it doesn’t seem to work? >> myCompareFile1 = ascii(myTitleName) >> myCompareFile1.replace("\u2019", "'") > > Strings in Python are immutable. When you call ascii(), you get back a > new string, but it's one that has actual backslashes and such in it. > (You probably don't need this step, other than for debugging; check > the string by printing out the ASCII version of it, but stick to the > original for actual processing.) The same is true of the replace() > method; it doesn't change the string, it returns a new string. > >>>> word = "spam" >>>> print(word.replace("sp", "h")) > ham >>>> print(word) > spam > > ChrisA > -- > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list