SF bug #1105286: Undocumented implicit strip() in split(None) string method

Clarify the behavior when a string begins or ends with whitespace.
This commit is contained in:
Raymond Hettinger 2005-01-25 10:21:19 +00:00
parent 62679968be
commit 770184b365
1 changed files with 10 additions and 6 deletions

View File

@ -738,7 +738,9 @@ The original string is returned if
Return a list of the words in the string, using \var{sep} as the
delimiter string. If \var{maxsplit} is given, at most \var{maxsplit}
splits are done, the \emph{rightmost} ones. If \var{sep} is not specified
or \code{None}, any whitespace string is a separator.
or \code{None}, any whitespace string is a separator. Except for splitting
from the right, \method{rsplit()} behaves like \method{split()} which
is described in detail below.
\versionadded{2.4}
\end{methoddesc}
@ -765,11 +767,13 @@ multiple characters (for example, \samp{'1, 2, 3'.split(', ')} returns
separator returns an empty list.
If \var{sep} is not specified or is \code{None}, a different splitting
algorithm is applied. Words are separated by arbitrary length strings of
whitespace characters (spaces, tabs, newlines, returns, and formfeeds).
Consecutive whitespace delimiters are treated as a single delimiter
(\samp{'1 2 3'.split()} returns \samp{['1', '2', '3']}). Splitting an
empty string returns \samp{['']}.
algorithm is applied. First, whitespace characters (spaces, tabs,
newlines, returns, and formfeeds) are stripped from both ends. Then,
words are separated by arbitrary length strings of whitespace
characters. Consecutive whitespace delimiters are treated as a single
delimiter (\samp{'1 2 3'.split()} returns \samp{['1', '2', '3']}).
Splitting an empty string or a string consisting of just whitespace
will return \samp{['']}.
\end{methoddesc}
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{splitlines}{\optional{keepends}}