2.6: String operations
- Page ID
- 40855
In general, you can’t perform mathematical operations on strings, even if the strings look like numbers, so the following are illegal:
'chinese'-'food' 'eggs'/'easy' 'third'*'a charm'
But there are two exceptions, + and *.
The + operator performs string concatenation, which means it joins the strings by linking them end-to-end. For example:
>>> first = 'throat' >>> second = 'warbler' >>> first + second throatwarbler
The * operator also works on strings; it performs repetition. For example, 'Spam'*3
is 'SpamSpamSpam'
. If one of the values is a string, the other has to be an integer.
This use of + and * makes sense by analogy with addition and multiplication. Just as 4*3
is equivalent to 4+4+4
, we expect 'Spam'*3
to be the same as 'Spam'+'Spam'+'Spam'
, and it is. On the other hand, there is a significant way in which string concatenation and repetition are different from integer addition and multiplication. Can you think of a property that addition has that string concatenation does not?