16
votes

I retrieved data from a sql query by using

bounds = cursor.fetchone()

And I get a tuple like:

(34.2424, -64.2344, 76.3534, 45.2344)

And I would like to have a string like 34.2424 -64.2344 76.3534 45.2344

Does a function exist that can do that?

5

5 Answers

37
votes

Use str.join():

>>> mystring = ' '.join(map(str, (34.2424, -64.2344, 76.3534, 45.2344)))
>>> print mystring
34.2424 -64.2344 76.3534 45.2344

You'll have to use map here (which converts all the items in the tuple to strings) because otherwise you will get a TypeError.


A bit of clarification on the map() function:

map(str, (34.2424, -64.2344, 76.3534, 45.2344) is equivalent to [str(i) for i in (34.2424, -64.2344, 76.3534, 45.2344)].

It's a tiny bit faster than using a list comprehension:

$ python -m timeit "map(str, (34.2424, -64.2344, 76.3534, 45.2344))"
1000000 loops, best of 3: 1.93 usec per loop
$ python -m timeit "[str(i) for i in (34.2424, -64.2344, 76.3534, 45.2344)]"
100000 loops, best of 3: 2.02 usec per loop

As shown in the comments to this answer, str.join() can take a generator instead of a list. Normally, this would be faster, but in this case, it is slower.

If I were to do:

' '.join(itertools.imap(str, (34.2424, -64.2344, 76.3534, 45.2344)))

It would be slower than using map(). The difference is that imap() returns a generator, while map() returns a list (in python 3 it returns a generator)

If I were to do:

''.join(str(i) for i in (34.2424, -64.2344, 76.3534, 45.2344))

It would be slower than putting brackets around the list comprehension, because of reasons explained here.


In your (OP's) case, either option does not really matter, as performance doesn't seem like a huge deal here. But if you are ever dealing with large tuples of floats/integers, then now you know what to use for maximum efficiency :).

5
votes

If I've got your message, you are getting tuple of floats, am I right?

If so, the following code should work:

In [1]: t = (34.2424 , -64.2344 , 76.3534 , 45.2344)

In [2]: ' '.join([str(x) for x in t])
Out[2]: '34.2424 -64.2344 76.3534 45.2344'

We're converting every value in tuple to string here, because str.join method can work only with lists of string. If t is a tuple of strings the code will be just ' '.join(t).

In case you're getting string in format "(34.2424 , -64.2344 , 76.3534 , 45.2344)", you should firstly get rid of unnescessary parthensis and commas:

In [3]: t = "(34.2424 , -64.2344 , 76.3534 , 45.2344)"

In [4]: t.strip('()')
Out[4]: '34.2424 , -64.2344 , 76.3534 , 45.2344'

In [5]: numbers = t.strip('()')

In [6]: numbers.split(' , ')
Out[6]: ['34.2424', '-64.2344', '76.3534', '45.2344']

In [7]: ' '.join(numbers.split(' , '))
Out[7]: '34.2424 -64.2344 76.3534 45.2344'
5
votes

You can also use str.format() to produce any arbitrary formatting if you're willing to use * magic. To handle the specific case of this question, with a single separator, is actually a little cumbersome:

>>> bounds = (34.2424, -64.2344, 76.3534, 45.2344)
>>> "{} {} {} {}".format(*bounds)

34.2424 -64.2344 76.3534 45.2344

A more robust version that handles any length, like join, is:

>>> len(bounds)*"{} ".format(*bounds)

But the value added is that if you want to extend your formatting to something more involved you've got the option:

>>> "{} --> | {:>10} | {:>10} | {:>10} |".format(*bounds)

34.2424 --> |   -64.2344 |    76.3534 |    45.2344 |

From here, your string formatting options are very diverse.

2
votes

Try this

>>> a = (34.2424, -64.2344, 76.3534, 45.2344)
>>> ' '.join(str(i) for i in a)
'34.2424 -64.2344 76.3534 45.2344
-1
votes

You could simply use the following code:

i = 0
for row in data:
       print(row[i])
       i++