Notice: This page requires JavaScript to function properly.
Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings or update your browser.
Leer String Slicing in Python | Variables and Types in Python
Practice
Projects
Quizzes & Challenges
Quizzes
Challenges
/
Introduction to Python(ihor)

bookString Slicing in Python

Sometimes you need to retrieve multiple elements from a text. This is where slicing comes in handy. Slicing allows us to access a range of elements without modifying the original sequence. To retrieve multiple characters at once, use square brackets ([]) and a colon (:) to specify the start and end indices.

The end position is always one more than the last character's index you want to include. In the example above, there are 10 positions, but the final index is 9.

12345678
# Initial strings platform_name = "codefinity" greeting_message = "How are you" # Slice strings to extract substrings # Spaces count as characters and have their own indices print(platform_name[0:4], platform_name[6:10]) print(greeting_message[2:5], greeting_message[6:11])
copy

You are given the string "Python" stored in the language variable, extract the substrings "tho" and "on". The indices for this string are shown below.

question-icon

Fill in the blanks to complete the task.

# Initial variable
language = "Python"
# Output the string parts
print(language[:])
print(language[
:])
tho
on

Click or drag`n`drop items and fill in the blanks

Was alles duidelijk?

Hoe kunnen we het verbeteren?

Bedankt voor je feedback!

Sectie 2. Hoofdstuk 8

Vraag AI

expand

Vraag AI

ChatGPT

Vraag wat u wilt of probeer een van de voorgestelde vragen om onze chat te starten.

bookString Slicing in Python

Veeg om het menu te tonen

Sometimes you need to retrieve multiple elements from a text. This is where slicing comes in handy. Slicing allows us to access a range of elements without modifying the original sequence. To retrieve multiple characters at once, use square brackets ([]) and a colon (:) to specify the start and end indices.

The end position is always one more than the last character's index you want to include. In the example above, there are 10 positions, but the final index is 9.

12345678
# Initial strings platform_name = "codefinity" greeting_message = "How are you" # Slice strings to extract substrings # Spaces count as characters and have their own indices print(platform_name[0:4], platform_name[6:10]) print(greeting_message[2:5], greeting_message[6:11])
copy

You are given the string "Python" stored in the language variable, extract the substrings "tho" and "on". The indices for this string are shown below.

question-icon

Fill in the blanks to complete the task.

# Initial variable
language = "Python"
# Output the string parts
print(language[:])
print(language[
:])
tho
on

Click or drag`n`drop items and fill in the blanks

Was alles duidelijk?

Hoe kunnen we het verbeteren?

Bedankt voor je feedback!

Sectie 2. Hoofdstuk 8
some-alt