bytearray.split(sep=None, maxsplit=-1)
Split the binary sequence into subsequences of the same type, using sep as the delimiter string. If maxsplit is given and non-negative, at most maxsplit splits are done (thus, the list will have at most maxsplit+1
elements). If maxsplit is not specified or is -1
, then there is no limit on the number of splits (all possible splits are made).
If sep is given, consecutive delimiters are not grouped together and are deemed to delimit empty subsequences (for example, b'1,,2'.split(b',')
returns [b'1', b'', b'2']
). The sep argument may consist of a multibyte sequence (for example, b'1<>2<>3'.split(b'<>')
returns [b'1', b'2', b'3']
). Splitting an empty sequence with a specified separator returns [b'']
or [bytearray(b'')]
depending on the type of object being split. The sep argument may be any bytes-like object.
For example:
>>> b'1,2,3'.split(b',') [b'1', b'2', b'3'] >>> b'1,2,3'.split(b',', maxsplit=1) [b'1', b'2,3'] >>> b'1,2,,3,'.split(b',') [b'1', b'2', b'', b'3', b'']
If sep is not specified or is None
, a different splitting algorithm is applied: runs of consecutive ASCII whitespace are regarded as a single separator, and the result will contain no empty strings at the start or end if the sequence has leading or trailing whitespace. Consequently, splitting an empty sequence or a sequence consisting solely of ASCII whitespace without a specified separator returns []
.
For example:
>>> b'1 2 3'.split() [b'1', b'2', b'3'] >>> b'1 2 3'.split(maxsplit=1) [b'1', b'2 3'] >>> b' 1 2 3 '.split() [b'1', b'2', b'3']
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