I had a situation where I wanted to remove a comma from the end of a string in Python. I thought there must be some idiomatic way of doing it, so I did a quick Google search: remove the last character in a string python
. I clicked on the first Stack Overflow question to get the answer.
It is marked as a duplicate of this question about slice notation, and that isn't even a question. No matter how many times you read it, "Explain slice notation" is not a question. Semantics aside, you could argue that removing the final character from a string is a subset of questions related to slice notation, but it is a stretch to mark it as a duplicate. If we take this argument to the extreme, should we then mark all Python questions that involve slice notation as a duplicate of the "Explain slice notation" question?
The truth is that I realized there was more to my original question. My Python construct looked similar to this:
if s.endswith(","):
s = s[:-1]
After some research, I concluded that it can be Pythonified like so:
s = s.rstrip(",")
It removes all of the commas that appear at the end of the string. It is beautiful and correct.
I would like to add that answer to the post where I fond he answer via Google but because it is marked as a duplicate, I cannot. And I cannot in good conscience place that answer in the other thread because it has absolutely nothing to do with the subject there, slice notation. However, it has everything to do with removing characters at the end of a string in Python.
I do not wish to ask another question on Stack Overflow to present my answer, since it ought to be marked as a duplicate of the Q I found with the answer, right? I tried flagging it once already to no avail, and I see many, many users seem to think that the question really is a duplicate. If I ever go looking for how to remove characters at the end of a string in Python, I want to be able to find the rstrip
solution quickly. (Truth be told, with all of the effort I'm putting into getting the answer posted in Stack Overflow, I will probably remember this idiom for a very long time.)
So can we unmark it as a duplicate? If not, what can we do to get my answer posted in a reasonable location?