Question

So I tried using join() after splitting a string into words and punctuation but it joins the string with a space in between the word and punctuation.

b = ['Hello', ',', 'who', 'are', 'you', '?']
c = " ".join(b)

But that returns:
c = 'Hello , who are you ?'

and I want:
c = 'Hello, who are you?'

Was it helpful?

Solution

You could join on the punctuation first:

def join_punctuation(seq, characters='.,;?!'):
    characters = set(characters)
    seq = iter(seq)
    current = next(seq)

    for nxt in seq:
        if nxt in characters:
            current += nxt
        else:
            yield current
            current = nxt

    yield current

c = ' '.join(join_punctuation(b))

The join_punctuation generator yields strings with any following punctuation already joined on:

>>> b = ['Hello', ',', 'who', 'are', 'you', '?']
>>> list(join_punctuation(b))
['Hello,', 'who', 'are', 'you?']
>>> ' '.join(join_punctuation(b))
'Hello, who are you?'

OTHER TIPS

Do this after you get the result, not full, but works...

c = re.sub(r' ([^A-Za-z0-9])', r'\1', c)

Output:

c = 'Hello , who are you ?'
>>> c = re.sub(r' ([^A-Za-z0-9])', r'\1', c)
>>> c
'Hello, who are you?'
>>> 

Maybe something like:

>>> from string import punctuation
>>> punc = set(punctuation) # or whatever special chars you want
>>> b = ['Hello', ',', 'who', 'are', 'you', '?']
>>> ''.join(w if set(w) <= punc else ' '+w for w in b).lstrip()
'Hello, who are you?'

This adds a space before words in b which aren't made up entirely of punctuation.

How abt

c = " ".join(b).replace(" ,", ",")
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