numpy string operations | rstrip() function

numpy.core.defchararray.rstrip(arr, chars=None)  is another function for doing string operations in numpy. It returns a copy with the  trailing characters removed for each element in arr.
Parameters:
arr : array_like of str or unicode.
char : [str or unicode, optional] the set of characters to be removed. If omitted or None, it removes whitespace. The chars argument is not a prefix or suffix; it is all combinations of its values which we want to strip.Returns : [ndarray] Output array of str or unicode, depending on input type.
Code #1 :
| # Python program explaining # numpy.char.rstrip() method   importnumpy as geek  # input arrays   in_arr =geek.array(['Sun', '  Moon  ', 'Star']) print("Input array : ", in_arr)   out_arr =geek.char.rstrip(in_arr)  # whitespace removed from arr[1]  # as we have set chars = None print("Output array: ", out_arr)   | 
Output:
Input array : ['Sun' ' Moon ' 'Star'] Output array: ['Sun' 'Moon' 'Star']
 
Code #2 : 
| # Python program explaining # numpy.char.rstrip() method   importnumpy as geek  # input arrays  in_arr =geek.array([ 'Geeks', 'For', 'Geeks'] ) print("Input array : ", in_arr)   out_arr =geek.char.rstrip(in_arr, chars ='s')  #'s' removed from arr[0] and  # arr[2] as we have set chars ='s' print("Output array: ", out_arr)   | 
Output:
Input array : ['Geeks' 'For' 'Geeks'] Output array: ['Geek' 'For' 'Geek']
 
Code #3 : 
| # Python program explaining # numpy.char.rstrip() method   importnumpy as geek  # input arrays  in_arr =geek.array([ 'GeeksG', 'ForG', 'Geeks'] ) print("Input array : ", in_arr)   out_arr =geek.char.rstrip(in_arr, chars ='G')  # will strip 'G' from right side # from each element(if exists) print("Output array: ", out_arr)   | 
Output:
Input array : ['GeeksG' 'ForG' 'Geeks'] Output array: ['Geeks' 'For' 'Geeks']
 
				 
					

