Python – Removing unwanted characters from string



Python – Removing unwanted characters from string

 

The generic problem faced by the programmers is removing a character from the entire string. But sometimes the requirement is way above and demands the removal of more than 1 character, but a list of such malicious characters. These can be in the form of special characters for reconstructing valid passwords and many other applications possible. Let’s discuss certain ways to perform this particular task.

Method #1 : Using replace() 

One can use replace() inside a loop to check for a bad_char and then replace it with the empty string hence removing it. This is the most basic approach and inefficient on a performance point of view.

# Python3 code to demonstrate
# removal of bad_chars
# using replace()
# initializing bad_chars_list
bad_chars = [';', ':', '!', "*"]
# initializing test string
test_string = "Ge;ek * s:fo ! r;Ge * e*k:s !"
# printing original string
print ("Original String : " + test_string)
# using replace() to
# remove bad_chars
for i in bad_chars :
    test_string = test_string.replace(i, '')
# printing resultant string
print ("Resultant list is : " + str(test_string))

Output :

Original String : Ge;ek*s:fo!r;Ge*e*k:s!
Resultant list is : GeeksforGeeks



Method #2 : Using join() + generator

By using join() we remake the string. In generator function, we specify the logic to ignore the characters in bad_chars and hence constructing new string free from bad characters.

# Python3 code to demonstrate
# removal of bad_chars
# using join() + generator
# initializing bad_chars_list
bad_chars = [';', ':', '!', "*"]
# initializing test string
test_string = "Ge;ek * s:fo ! r;Ge * e*k:s !"
# printing original string
print ("Original String : " + test_string)
# using join() + generator to
# remove bad_chars
test_string = ''.join(i for i in test_string if not i in bad_chars)
# printing resultant string
print ("Resultant list is : " + str(test_string))

Output :

Original String : Ge;ek*s:fo!r;Ge*e*k:s!
Resultant list is : GeeksforGeeks



Method #3 : Using translate()

The most elegant way to perform this particular task, this method is basically used for achieving the solution to these kind of problems itself, we can translate each bad_char to empty string and get filtered string.

 

# Python3 code to demonstrate
# removal of bad_chars
# using translate()
import string
# initializing bad_chars_list
bad_chars = [';', ':', '!', "*"]
# initializing test string
test_string = "Ge;ek * s:fo ! r;Ge * e*k:s !"
# printing original string
print ("Original String : " + test_string)
# using translate() to
# remove bad_chars
delete_dict = {sp_character: '' for sp_character in string.punctuation}
delete_dict[' '] = ''
table = str.maketrans(delete_dict)
test_string = test_string.translate(table)
# printing resultant string
print ("Resultant list is : " + str(test_string))

Output :

Original String : Ge;ek*s:fo!r;Ge*e*k:s!
Resultant list is : GeeksforGeeks



Method #4 : Using filter()

This is yet another solution to perform this task. Using the lambda function, filter function can remove all the bad_chars and return the wanted refined string.

# Python3 code to demonstrate
# removal of bad_chars
# using filter()
# initializing bad_chars_list
bad_chars = [';', ':', '!', "*"]
# initializing test string
test_string = "Ge;ek*s:fo!r;Ge*e*k:s!"
# printing original string
print("Original String : " + test_string)
# using filter() to
# remove bad_chars
test_string = ''.join((filter(lambda i: i not in bad_chars, test_string)))
# printing resultant string
print("Resultant list is : " + str(test_string))

Output :

Original String : Ge;ek*s:fo!r;Ge*e*k:s!
Resultant list is : GeeksforGeeks



 

Last Updated on August 30, 2021 by admin

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended Blogs