String modification refers to the process of changing the characters of a string. If we talk about modifying a string in Python, what we are talking about is creating a new string that is a variation of the original one.
In Python, a string (object of str class) is of immutable type. Here, immutable refers to an object thatcannotbe modified in place once it’s created in memory. Unlike a list, we cannot overwrite any character in the sequence, nor can we insert or append characters to it directly. If we need to modify a string, we will use certain string methods that return anewstring object. However, the original string remains unchanged.
We can use any of the following tricks as a workaround to modify a string.
Converting a String to a List
Both strings and lists in Python are sequence types, they are interconvertible. Thus, we can cast a string to a list, modify the list using methods like insert(), append(), or remove() and then convert the list back to a string to obtain a modified version.
Suppose, we have a string variable s1 with WORD as its value and we are required to convert it into a list. For this operation, we can use the list() built-in function and insert a character L at index 3. Then, we can concatenate all the characters using join() method of str class.
Example
The below example practically illustrates how to convert a string into a list.
s1="WORD"print("original string:", s1) l1=list(s1) l1.insert(3,"L")print(l1) s1=''.join(l1)print("Modified string:", s1)
It will produce the following output −
original string: WORD ['W', 'O', 'R', 'L', 'D'] Modified string: WORLD
Using the Array Module
To modify a string, construct an array object using the Python standard library named array module. It will create an array of Unicode type from a string variable.
Example
In the below example, we are using array module to modify the specified string.
import array as ar # initializing a string s1="WORD"print("original string:", s1)# converting it to an array sar=ar.array('u', s1)# inserting an element sar.insert(3,"L")# getting back the modified string s1=sar.tounicode()print("Modified string:", s1)
It will produce the following output −
original string: WORD Modified string: WORLD
Using the StringIO Class
Python’s io module defines the classes to handle streams. The StringIO class represents a text stream using an in-memory text buffer. A StringIO object obtained from a string behaves like a File object. Hence we can perform read/write operations on it. The getvalue() method of StringIO class returns a string.
Example
Let us use the above discussed principle in the following program to modify a string.
import io s1="WORD"print("original string:", s1) sio=io.StringIO(s1) sio.seek(3) sio.write("LD") s1=sio.getvalue()print("Modified string:", s1)
It will produce the following output −
original string: WORD
Modified string: WORLD
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