Removing u in list

Question:

I have read up on remove the character ‘u’ in a list but I am using google app engine and it does not seem to work!

def get(self):
    players = db.GqlQuery("SELECT * FROM Player")
    print players
    playerInfo  = {}

    test = []

    for player in players:
        email =  player.email
        gem =  str(player.gem)
        a = "{email:"+email + ",gem:" +gem +"}"

        test.append(a)


    ast.literal_eval(json.dumps(test))
    print test

Final output:

[u'{email:[email protected],gem:0}', u'{email:test,gem:0}', u'{email:test,gem:0}', u'{email:test,gem:0}', u'{email:test,gem:0}', u'{email:test1,gem:0}']
Asked By: Brian Li

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Answers:

That ‘u’ is part of the external representation of the string, meaning it’s a Unicode string as opposed to a byte string. It’s not in the string, it’s part of the type.

As an example, you can create a new Unicode string literal by using the same synax. For instance:

>>> sandwich = u"smörgås"
>>> sandwich
u'smxf6rgxe5s'

This creates a new Unicode string whose value is the Swedish word for sandwich. You can see that the non-English characters are represented by their Unicode code points, ö is xf6 and å is xe5. The ‘u’ prefix appears just like in your example to signify that this string holds Unicode text.

To get rid of those, you need to encode the Unicode string into some byte-oriented representation, such as UTF-8. You can do that with e.g.:

>>> sandwich.encode("utf-8")
'smxc3xb6rgxc3xa5s'

Here, we get a new string without the prefix ‘u’, since this is a byte string. It contains the bytes representing the characters of the Unicode string, with the Swedish characters resulting in multiple bytes due to the wonders of the UTF-8 encoding.

Answered By: unwind

You don’t “remove the character ‘u’ from a list”, you encode Unicode strings. In fact the strings you have are perfectly fine for most uses; you will just need to encode them appropriately before outputting them.

Answered By: kindall

The u means the strings are unicode. Translate all the strings to ascii to get rid of it:

a.encode('ascii', 'ignore')
Answered By: Intra

u'AB' is just a text representation of the corresponding Unicode string. Here’re several methods that create exactly the same Unicode string:

L = [u'AB', u'x41x42', u'u0041u0042', unichr(65) + unichr(66)]
print u", ".join(L)

Output

AB, AB, AB, AB

There is no u'' in memory. It is just the way to represent the unicode object in Python 2 (how you would write the Unicode string literal in a Python source code). By default print L is equivalent to print "[%s]" % ", ".join(map(repr, L)) i.e., repr() function is called for each list item:

print L
print "[%s]" % ", ".join(map(repr, L))

Output

[u'AB', u'AB', u'AB', u'AB']
[u'AB', u'AB', u'AB', u'AB']

If you are working in a REPL then a customizable sys.displayhook is used that calls repr() on each object by default:

>>> L = [u'AB', u'x41x42', u'u0041u0042', unichr(65) + unichr(66)]
>>> L
[u'AB', u'AB', u'AB', u'AB']
>>> ", ".join(L)
u'AB, AB, AB, AB'
>>> print ", ".join(L)
AB, AB, AB, AB

Don’t encode to bytes. Print unicode directly.


In your specific case, I would create a Python list and use json.dumps() to serialize it instead of using string formatting to create JSON text:

#!/usr/bin/env python2
import json
# ...
test = [dict(email=player.email, gem=player.gem)
        for player in players]
print test
print json.dumps(test)

Output

[{'email': u'[email protected]', 'gem': 0}, {'email': u'test', 'gem': 0}, {'email': u'test', 'gem': 0}, {'email': u'test', 'gem': 0}, {'email': u'test', 'gem': 0}, {'email': u'test1', 'gem': 0}]
[{"email": "[email protected]", "gem": 0}, {"email": "test", "gem": 0}, {"email": "test", "gem": 0}, {"email": "test", "gem": 0}, {"email": "test", "gem": 0}, {"email": "test1", "gem": 0}]
Answered By: jfs
arr = [str(r) for r in arr]

This basically converts all your elements in string. Hence removes the encoding. Hence the u which represents encoding gets removed
Will do the work easily and efficiently

Answered By: mohdnaveed
[u'{email:[email protected],gem:0}', u'{email:test,gem:0}', u'{email:test,gem:0}', u'{email:test,gem:0}', u'{email:test,gem:0}', u'{email:test1,gem:0}']

‘u’ denotes unicode characters. We can easily remove this with map function on the final list element

map(str, test)

Another way is when you are appending it to the list

test.append(str(a))
Answered By: HimanshuGahlot

For python datasets you can use an index.

tmpColumnsSQL = ("show columns in dim.date_dim")
hiveCursor.execute(tmpColumnsSQL)
columnlist = hiveCursor.fetchall()

for columns in jayscolumnlist:
    print columns[0]

for i in range(len(jayscolumnlist)):    
    print columns[i][0])
Answered By: mdcscry

Please Use map() python function.

Input: In case of list of values

index = [u'CARBO1004' u'CARBO1006' u'CARBO1008' u'CARBO1009' u'CARBO1020']

encoded_string = map(str, index)

Output: ['CARBO1004', 'CARBO1006', 'CARBO1008', 'CARBO1009', 'CARBO1020']

For a Single string input:

index = u'CARBO1004'
# Use Any one of the encoding scheme.
index.encode("utf-8")  # To utf-8 encoding scheme
index.encode('ascii', 'ignore')  # To Ignore Encoding Errors and set to default scheme

Output: 'CARBO1004'

Answered By: Hilar AK