What's the best way to create and name a primary source question to redirect the high volume of Python questions asking why calling a string operation doesn't change the string.
Naming this something friendly to new users and new-user searches will be crucial, because a person searching for "String method XYZ doesn't work" will never find "Why are Python strings immutable?" (and even if they somehow could, its title and language won't seem related to answering their issue).
Every day now we're getting new ones, all these duplicates are just clogging the site, in many cases these could be closed-as-duplicate immediately:
- python string replace
- string.replace() doesnt seem to work
- python .lower() is not working
- This code snippet is not working for both upper case and lower case letters
- issue about replace() function
- 'Replace' string function not working in Python
- How to modify the content of a string using Regular Expression (Just like String.Replace)
- Convert list to lower-case
- string.upper() and .upper() won't execute
The reference question sometimes used e.g. Why are Python string immutable? Best practices of using them is not suitable for this purpose because the name is not intuitive, and it has way too much information for just this specific common issue. New users don't need a bloody essay on immutability and language design philosophies; they just need the one-liner "you need to actually assign the output of the string function/method call to something, it doesn't work just calling it in-place".
UPDATE: Per my answer below, my suggestion is let's use Why doesn't calling a Python string method do anything unless you assign its output? ; I picked this and renamed it from "python string replace" since its answer is short and to-the-point, and it already has upvotes.
replace
method change my string variable?"replace
,lower
, etc. It would probably be better if there was an answer added to it that better explained the issue with those, so it could actually be used as a duplicate target.X = sometext
valid or does it have to beX = "sometext"
? If the latter then the posted question should be updated.