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- atof(...)
- atof(s) -> float
Return the floating point number represented by the string s.
- atoi(...)
- atoi(s [,base]) -> int
Return the integer represented by the string s in the given
base, which defaults to 10. The string s must consist of one
or more digits, possibly preceded by a sign. If base is 0, it
is chosen from the leading characters of s, 0 for octal, 0x or
0X for hexadecimal. If base is 16, a preceding 0x or 0X is
accepted.
- atol(...)
- atol(s [,base]) -> long
Return the long integer represented by the string s in the
given base, which defaults to 10. The string s must consist
of one or more digits, possibly preceded by a sign. If base
is 0, it is chosen from the leading characters of s, 0 for
octal, 0x or 0X for hexadecimal. If base is 16, a preceding
0x or 0X is accepted. A trailing L or l is not accepted,
unless base is 0.
- capitalize(...)
- capitalize(s) -> string
Return a copy of the string s with only its first character
capitalized.
- count(...)
- count(s, sub[, start[, end]]) -> int
Return the number of occurrences of substring sub in string
s[start:end]. Optional arguments start and end are
interpreted as in slice notation.
- expandtabs(...)
- expandtabs(string, [tabsize]) -> string
Expand tabs in a string, i.e. replace them by one or more spaces,
depending on the current column and the given tab size (default 8).
The column number is reset to zero after each newline occurring in the
string. This doesn't understand other non-printing characters.
- find(...)
- find(s, sub [,start [,end]]) -> in
Return the lowest index in s where substring sub is found,
such that sub is contained within s[start,end]. Optional
arguments start and end are interpreted as in slice notation.
Return -1 on failure.
- join(...)
- join(list [,sep]) -> string
joinfields(list [,sep]) -> string
Return a string composed of the words in list, with
intervening occurrences of sep. Sep defaults to a single
space.
(join and joinfields are synonymous)
- joinfields(...)
- join(list [,sep]) -> string
joinfields(list [,sep]) -> string
Return a string composed of the words in list, with
intervening occurrences of sep. Sep defaults to a single
space.
(join and joinfields are synonymous)
- lower(...)
- lower(s) -> string
Return a copy of the string s converted to lowercase.
- lstrip(...)
- lstrip(s) -> string
Return a copy of the string s with leading whitespace removed.
- maketrans(...)
- maketrans(frm, to) -> string
Return a translation table (a string of 256 bytes long)
suitable for use in string.translate. The strings frm and to
must be of the same length.
- replace(...)
- replace (str, old, new[, maxsplit]) -> string
Return a copy of string str with all occurrences of substring
old replaced by new. If the optional argument maxsplit is
given, only the first maxsplit occurrences are replaced.
- rfind(...)
- rfind(s, sub [,start [,end]]) -> int
Return the highest index in s where substring sub is found,
such that sub is contained within s[start,end]. Optional
arguments start and end are interpreted as in slice notation.
Return -1 on failure.
- rstrip(...)
- rstrip(s) -> string
Return a copy of the string s with trailing whitespace removed.
- split(...)
- split(s [,sep [,maxsplit]]) -> list of strings
splitfields(s [,sep [,maxsplit]]) -> list of strings
Return a list of the words in the string s, using sep as the
delimiter string. If maxsplit is nonzero, splits into at most
maxsplit words. If sep is not specified, any whitespace string
is a separator. Maxsplit defaults to 0.
(split and splitfields are synonymous)
- splitfields(...)
- split(s [,sep [,maxsplit]]) -> list of strings
splitfields(s [,sep [,maxsplit]]) -> list of strings
Return a list of the words in the string s, using sep as the
delimiter string. If maxsplit is nonzero, splits into at most
maxsplit words. If sep is not specified, any whitespace string
is a separator. Maxsplit defaults to 0.
(split and splitfields are synonymous)
- strip(...)
- strip(s) -> string
Return a copy of the string s with leading and trailing
whitespace removed.
- swapcase(...)
- swapcase(s) -> string
Return a copy of the string s with upper case characters
converted to lowercase and vice versa.
- translate(...)
- translate(s,table [,deletechars]) -> string
Return a copy of the string s, where all characters occurring
in the optional argument deletechars are removed, and the
remaining characters have been mapped through the given
translation table, which must be a string of length 256.
- upper(...)
- upper(s) -> string
Return a copy of the string s converted to uppercase.
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