Python Replace \\\\ with \\

痞子三分冷 提交于 2019-11-27 00:57:22
Jochen Ritzel

There's no need to use replace for this.

What you have is a encoded string (using the string_escape encoding) and you want to decode it:

>>> s = r"Escaped\nNewline"
>>> print s
Escaped\nNewline
>>> s.decode('string_escape')
'Escaped\nNewline'
>>> print s.decode('string_escape')
Escaped
Newline
>>> "a\\nb".decode('string_escape')
'a\nb'

In Python 3:

>>> import codecs
>>> codecs.decode('\\n\\x21', 'unicode_escape')
'\n!'

You are missing, that \ is the escape character.

Look here: http://docs.python.org/reference/lexical_analysis.html at 2.4.1 "Escape Sequence"

Most importantly \n is a newline character. And \\ is an escaped escape character :D

>>> a = 'a\\\\nb'
>>> a
'a\\\\nb'
>>> print a
a\\nb
>>> a.replace('\\\\', '\\')
'a\\nb'
>>> print a.replace('\\\\', '\\')
a\nb

Your original string, a = 'a\\nb' does not actually have two '\' characters, the first one is an escape for the latter. If you do, print a, you'll see that you actually have only one '\' character.

>>> a = 'a\\nb'
>>> print a
a\nb

If, however, what you mean is to interpret the '\n' as a newline character, without escaping the slash, then:

>>> b = a.replace('\\n', '\n')
>>> b
'a\nb'
>>> print b
a
b

It's because, even in "raw" strings (=strings with an r before the starting quote(s)), an unescaped escape character cannot be the last character in the string. This should work instead:

'\\ '[0]

In Python string literals, backslash is an escape character. This is also true when the interactive prompt shows you the value of a string. It will give you the literal code representation of the string. Use the print statement to see what the string actually looks like.

This example shows the difference:

>>> '\\'
'\\'
>>> print '\\'
\
r'a\\nb'.replace('\\\\', '\\')

or

'a\nb'.replace('\n', '\\n')
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