Rinzwind wrote: > Works for me. > >>>> txt = "an unfortunate <br> in the middle" >>>> print txt.replace("<br>", "") > an unfortunate in the middle >>>> > > > Though I don't like the 2 spaces it gives ;) > Although I generally advise against overuse of regular expressions, this is one situation where regular expressions might be useful: the situation is simple enough not to warrant a parser, but apart from the whitespace a <br> tag could have attributes or be written in xhtml style <br />. Also judging by the inconsistency between the OP's subject line and his original question he doesn't seem sure whether the tag is <br> or <BR> or even <Br>.
>>> import re >>> nobr = re.compile('\W*<br.*?>\W*', re.I) >>> nobr.sub(' ', "an unfortunate <br /> in the middle") 'an unfortunate in the middle' >>> nobr.sub(' ', "an unfortunate <BR> in the middle") 'an unfortunate in the middle' -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list