Using slicing:

>>> 'hello world'[::-1]
'dlrow olleh'

Slice notation takes the form [start:stop:step]. In this case, we omit the start and stop positions since we want the whole string. We also use step = -1, which means, "repeatedly step from right to left by 1 character".

Answer from Paolo Bergantino on Stack Overflow
Top answer
1 of 14
3168

Using slicing:

>>> 'hello world'[::-1]
'dlrow olleh'

Slice notation takes the form [start:stop:step]. In this case, we omit the start and stop positions since we want the whole string. We also use step = -1, which means, "repeatedly step from right to left by 1 character".

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329

What is the best way of implementing a reverse function for strings?

My own experience with this question is academic. However, if you're a pro looking for the quick answer, use a slice that steps by -1:

>>> 'a string'[::-1]
'gnirts a'

or more readably (but slower due to the method name lookups and the fact that join forms a list when given an iterator), str.join:

>>> ''.join(reversed('a string'))
'gnirts a'

or for readability and reusability, put the slice in a function

def reversed_string(a_string):
    return a_string[::-1]

and then:

>>> reversed_string('a_string')
'gnirts_a'

Longer explanation

If you're interested in the academic exposition, please keep reading.

There is no built-in reverse function in Python's str object.

Here is a couple of things about Python's strings you should know:

  1. In Python, strings are immutable. Changing a string does not modify the string. It creates a new one.

  2. Strings are sliceable. Slicing a string gives you a new string from one point in the string, backwards or forwards, to another point, by given increments. They take slice notation or a slice object in a subscript:

    string[subscript]
    

The subscript creates a slice by including a colon within the braces:

    string[start:stop:step]

To create a slice outside of the braces, you'll need to create a slice object:

    slice_obj = slice(start, stop, step)
    string[slice_obj]

A readable approach:

While ''.join(reversed('foo')) is readable, it requires calling a string method, str.join, on another called function, which can be rather relatively slow. Let's put this in a function - we'll come back to it:

def reverse_string_readable_answer(string):
    return ''.join(reversed(string))

Most performant approach:

Much faster is using a reverse slice:

'foo'[::-1]

But how can we make this more readable and understandable to someone less familiar with slices or the intent of the original author? Let's create a slice object outside of the subscript notation, give it a descriptive name, and pass it to the subscript notation.

start = stop = None
step = -1
reverse_slice = slice(start, stop, step)
'foo'[reverse_slice]

Implement as Function

To actually implement this as a function, I think it is semantically clear enough to simply use a descriptive name:

def reversed_string(a_string):
    return a_string[::-1]

And usage is simply:

reversed_string('foo')

What your teacher probably wants:

If you have an instructor, they probably want you to start with an empty string, and build up a new string from the old one. You can do this with pure syntax and literals using a while loop:

def reverse_a_string_slowly(a_string):
    new_string = ''
    index = len(a_string)
    while index:
        index -= 1                    # index = index - 1
        new_string += a_string[index] # new_string = new_string + character
    return new_string

This is theoretically bad because, remember, strings are immutable - so every time where it looks like you're appending a character onto your new_string, it's theoretically creating a new string every time! However, CPython knows how to optimize this in certain cases, of which this trivial case is one.

Best Practice

Theoretically better is to collect your substrings in a list, and join them later:

def reverse_a_string_more_slowly(a_string):
    new_strings = []
    index = len(a_string)
    while index:
        index -= 1                       
        new_strings.append(a_string[index])
    return ''.join(new_strings)

However, as we will see in the timings below for CPython, this actually takes longer, because CPython can optimize the string concatenation.

Timings

Here are the timings:

>>> a_string = 'amanaplanacanalpanama' * 10
>>> min(timeit.repeat(lambda: reverse_string_readable_answer(a_string)))
10.38789987564087
>>> min(timeit.repeat(lambda: reversed_string(a_string)))
0.6622700691223145
>>> min(timeit.repeat(lambda: reverse_a_string_slowly(a_string)))
25.756799936294556
>>> min(timeit.repeat(lambda: reverse_a_string_more_slowly(a_string)))
38.73570013046265

CPython optimizes string concatenation, whereas other implementations may not:

... do not rely on CPython's efficient implementation of in-place string concatenation for statements in the form a += b or a = a + b . This optimization is fragile even in CPython (it only works for some types) and isn't present at all in implementations that don't use refcounting. In performance sensitive parts of the library, the ''.join() form should be used instead. This will ensure that concatenation occurs in linear time across various implementations.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnprogramming › why does [::1] reverse a string in python?
r/learnprogramming on Reddit: Why does [::1] reverse a string in Python?
September 21, 2023 -

For example:

txt = "Hello World"[::-1]

Isn't the splice syntax [start : stop: step]? And default of start and stop are the beginning and end of the string? So that would make the above start at the beginning, stop at the end, but step by -1. That feels like it would start at the beginning, then step backwards to...before the beginning of the string?

Sorry for the silly question, I just can't figure out why this syntax works the way it does.

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Python.org
discuss.python.org › ideas
Method for reversing strings - Ideas - Discussions on Python.org
February 20, 2025 - There may be other methods like splitting the string, reversing the resulting list, and then joining it back, but that’s a bit of work! There have been several times in my QA career where I am scripting in Python and need to reverse a string, but I have to look up the [::-1] syntax because ...
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GeeksforGeeks
geeksforgeeks.org › dsa › reverse-a-string
Reverse a String - GeeksforGeeks
DSA Python · Last Updated : 7 Mar, 2026 · Given a string s, reverse the string. Reversing a string means rearranging the characters such that the first character becomes the last, the second character becomes second last and so on.
Published   March 7, 2026
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Educative
educative.io › answers › how-do-you-reverse-a-string-in-python
How do you reverse a string in Python?
In Python, strings are ordered sequences of character data. There is no built-in method to reverse a string.
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GeeksforGeeks
geeksforgeeks.org › python › reverse-string-python-5-different-ways
How to reverse a String in Python - GeeksforGeeks
We can reverse the string by taking a step value of -1. ... Python provides a built-in function called reversed() which can be used to reverse the characters in a string.
Published   March 3, 2026
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Akamai
akamai.com › cloud › guides › how-to-reverse-a-string-in-python
How to Reverse a String in Python | Linode Docs
May 13, 2022 - See our For and While Loops in Python 3 guide for deeper dive into these loop statements. A while loop takes a single condition and loops until that condition is no longer met. The standard approach is to then have the condition manipulated, within the loop, to end the loop when it is no longer needed. To reverse a string with a while loop, you can use a variable starting at the value of the string’s length.
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LeetCode
leetcode.com › problems › reverse-string
Reverse String - LeetCode
The input string is given as an array of characters s. You must do this by modifying the input array in-place [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In-place_algorithm] with O(1) extra memory.
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Better Programming
betterprogramming.pub › benchmarking-the-best-way-to-reverse-a-string-in-python-9c73d87b1b1a
Benchmarking the Best Way to Reverse a String in Python | by Nick Gibbon | Better Programming
September 16, 2019 - Because Python strings are immutable, it is likely that each reversed_output = reversed_output + s[i] takes the current state of the output string and the new character and copies them to a new variable.
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LogRocket
blog.logrocket.com › home › 5 methods to reverse a python string
5 methods to reverse a Python string - LogRocket Blog
June 4, 2024 - new_string = '' ... count = len(input_string) - 1 ... while count >= 0: ... new_string = new_string + input_string[count] ... count = count - 1 ... return new_string >>> w_reverse('?uoy era woH') 'How are you?' Here, we are creating a function and initializing a new variable, the same as the previous example · Now we take the length of the input string and subtract it by 1 because the index in Python starts from 0.
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Python documentation
docs.python.org › 3 › library › stdtypes.html
Built-in Types — Python 3.14.6 documentation
Note that the exponent is written in decimal rather than hexadecimal, and that it gives the power of 2 by which to multiply the coefficient. For example, the hexadecimal string 0x3.a7p10 represents the floating-point number (3 + 10./16 + 7./16**2) * 2.0**10, or 3740.0: ... Applying the reverse conversion to 3740.0 gives a different hexadecimal string representing the same number:
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4geeks.com › how-to › how-to-reverse-string-in-python
How to reverse string in Python?
July 16, 2025 - Learn how to reverse a string in Python using various methods! Discover simple code examples and enhance your programming skills today!
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Python Engineer
python-engineer.com › posts › reverse-string-python
How to reverse a String in Python - Python Engineer
There is no built-in string.reverse() function. However, there is another easy solution. ... The recommended way is to use slicing. my_string = "Python" reversed_string = my_string[::-1] print(reversed_string) # nohtyP
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Medium
medium.com › @khasnobis.sanjit890 › python-reverse-string-74cc521cf8ca
Python Reverse String. Today we are going to write some code… | by Sanjit Khasnobis | Medium
September 10, 2023 - def reverseStr_reversed_method(inputStr): inputStrlist = list(inputStr) outputStrlist = reversed(inputStrlist) outputStr = "".join(outputStrlist) return outputStr ... Here, we have used python inbuilt framework reversed method.
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Medium
medium.com › @johnidouglasmarangon › reversing-strings-in-python-immutability-explained-9cc2010be991
Reversing Strings in Python: Immutability Explained | by Johni Douglas Marangon | Medium
January 23, 2025 - While you cannot reverse a string ... you can easily create a new string that is the reverse of the original using slicing, the reversed() function, a loop, or by converting the string to a list and reversing it....
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Cisco
ipcisco.com › home › python string reverse
Python String Reverse | Printing reverse of a string in python ⋆ IpCisco
December 27, 2021 - The return of this python code will be the string that shows the reverese of the beginning string. ... Here, we can change the last step parameter as -2 and we can print the string in reverse direction. But this time, we will print one character and we will not print the second one.
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Team Treehouse
teamtreehouse.com › community › ways-to-reverse-a-string-in-python
Ways to reverse a string in Python? (Example) | Treehouse Community
September 11, 2014 - Strings haven't changed much, but be careful about using Python 2 docs. ... Andrew Merrick Apologies. That's correct. .reverse() only works on lists. I was actually suggesting that you split the string into letters, reverse that list, and join them back together all in one line of code.
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Mimo
mimo.org › tutorials › python › how-to-reverse-a-string-in-python
How to Reverse a String in Python
Reverse strings in Python with slicing or reversed()+join, and use the reversed result for clean comparisons like palindrome checks.