Steven D'Aprano wrote: > On Sat, 11 Mar 2006 13:37:05 +0100, Fredrik Lundh wrote: > > >>"ygao" wrote: >> >> >>>my question is as title! >> >>my answer as code: >> >> >>>>>s = "g" >>>>>t = "" >>>>>s[0:0+len(t)] == t >> >>True >> >>>>>s[1:1+len(t)] == t >> >>True > > > > Or in other words, imagine that Python is walking the string looking to > match the target. The empty string matches the boundary of every character > with the next character, or in other words, for a string s of length N, > s.count('') will equal N+1. > > I'm not sure what to describe this surprising result as. It isn't a bug; > it isn't even really a gotcha. I guess the best description is that it is > just a surprising, but logical, result.
Yes, but: py> "gab".split("") Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? ValueError: empty separator The idea is not consistent between string functions. I actually consider this latter example a bug. Jaems -- James Stroud UCLA-DOE Institute for Genomics and Proteomics Box 951570 Los Angeles, CA 90095 http://www.jamesstroud.com/ -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list