Coding Challenge
π¬ Question: Given a Python string. How to split the string after the k-th occurrence of the separator (string or character)? In other words: how to ignore the first (k-1) separator occurrences when splitting a string?

Here are three examples:
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'a-b-c-d-e-f-g-h',k=2, andsep='-'should be split to['a-b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f', 'g', 'h']'helloxxxworldxxxpythonxxxisxxxgreat',k=3, andsep='xxx'should be split to['helloxxxworldxxxpython', 'is', 'great']- Border case:
'a-b',k=100, andsep='-'should be split to['a-b']
π Related Tutorial: Python Split String After Second Occurrence
Solution
You can split a string after the k-th occurrence of a given character in three steps:
- First, split the whole string using the separator sep in
s.split(sep). - Second, combine the first k elements of the resulting split list using the
sep.join()method call. - Third, use slicing and list concatenation to create a new result list.
The following code creates a function that takes as input a string s, an integer k, and a separator string sep and splits the string at the k-th occurrence of the separator:
def my_split(s, k, sep):
all_split = s.split(sep)
return [sep.join(all_split[0:k])] + all_split[k:]
print(my_split('a-b-c-d-e-f-g-h', k=2, sep='-'))
# ['a-b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f', 'g', 'h']
print(my_split('helloxxxworldxxxpythonxxxisxxxgreat', k=3, sep='xxx'))
# ['helloxxxworldxxxpython', 'is', 'great']
print(my_split('a-b', k=100, sep='-'))
# ['a-b']Explanations
The code does multiple things.
First, it creates a list all_split by splitting the string s using separator sep. For example, when using it on string 'a-b-c-d-e-f-g-h' and sep='-', it would return ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f', 'g', 'h'].
π Recommended Tutorial: Python String Split
Second, it combines the first k elements using the separator string sep between them by running sep.join(all_split[0:k]).
Recommended Tutorials: π
- Python String Join for
sep.join(...) - Python Slicing for
all_split[0:k] - Python Split String at First Occurrence
Third, it puts the result into a list using the square bracket notation, i.e., we get a list with one string element ['a-b'] for our example.
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Fourth, you concatenate this list with the remaining all_split list, ignoring the first k split results, that are already merged to ignore the first split, by using the slicing expression all_split[k:].
In our example, we get ['a-b'] and ['c', 'd', 'e', 'f', 'g', 'h'] that concatenates to ['a-b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f', 'g', 'h'].
π Recommended Tutorials: List Concatenation in Python
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