On Wed, May 19, 2010 at 8:34 PM, <pyt...@bdurham.com> wrote: > How can I unescape a raw string so that it behaves as a non-raw string?
That's not what the notion of raw strings in Python technically means, but anyway... > For example, if I read the string "\n\t A B C\" D E F \xa0 \u1234" I'll assume you're quoting the file contents itself verbatim here, rather than a Python string literal (which would require doubling up on the backslashes). > from a > text file, how can I convert (unescape?) this string so that \n, \t, \", \x, > and \u get converted to a newline, tab, double quote, hex encoded and > unicode encoded chars? > > I know I can do this explictly via a series of .replace() methods, but > certainly there must be a built-in way to do this on a generic basis? new_string = your_string.decode('string_escape') Cheers, Chris -- http://blog.rebertia.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list